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‘The. Weather _ US W a 
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(Details Page 2) P; 
  Edition   7th rate tT UNITED: p Bain pg TN ATIONG, 
TED PRESS W 
  = 
  SCENE OF WRECK — Two police officers 
inspect scattered ruins of light plane which 
crashed yesterday..afternoon into the White Lake 
Township corn field killing its three occupants, 
By MAX E. SIMON 
Nosediving into a cornfield near 
Pontiac, a light, single-engine 
plane carried three persons to) 
their deaths Sunday afternoon. 
Killed instantly in the crash | 
were: 
Eari A. Trebesch, 29,. of 8712 
Studebaker St., Warren; his four- 
year-old son, Mark; and Robert 
Sowders, 34, of 8661 Page St., 
Warren. 
The fight plane. a four-seat 
Piper Tri-Pacer, crashed into a 
White Lake Township field near 
the intersection of Fisk road and 
M59, two miles west of Pontiac 
Municipal Airport. 
-Debris was acuttered atoat the 
area. The plane was demolished. 
Pontiac State Police troopers Warren. Cause 
jand Oakland County sheriff's 
‘deputies have not been able to de- 
termine who was piloting the 
plane. It was equipped with dual 
[controls 
x ke f : 
| Wrecking crews were forced to 
use cutting equipment to -emove 
the bodies. 
Scores of White Lake Township 
residents saw the crash. 
ENGINE SPUTTERED 
Witnesses said the plane circled 
the field and headed due west 
when the engine suddenly sput- 
tered. The pilot revved the motor, 
they sajd. Then the engine sud- 
denly stQpped, and the plane went 
screeching to the ground. 
The plane was flying at an 
altitude of approximately 500 feet     
Passes Truth Serum Test   
Clear Tunnell in Slaying Lloyd J. Tunnell, 53, held for investigation of first 
degree murder in the shooting of Dr. W. Carleton 
Warrick, yesterday was released and cleared of any con- 
nection with the crime. 
After two previous lie detector tests had produced   
We're Brightest 
City in Michigan Downtown Pontiac Has 
a Brilliant Glow From 
New Street Lights 
Downtown Pontiac has becomé 
just about the brightest downtown 
area in Michigan at nighttime. 
* * * 
With the new downtown street 
light installations nearly complet- 
ed by Consumers Power Co., of- 
fials and merchants are greeting 
the new nighttime brilliance’ en- 
thusiastically. 
Consumers has ‘nstalied near- 
ly all the 76 new lights on Sagi- 
naw street from Lafayette to 
Whittemore and on Huron street, 
Cass to Mill. 
No othe? city in Michigan is us- 
ing street lights as bright as Pon- 
tiac’s, said Edward L. Karkau, 
Consumer's district manager. 
1 TIMES STRONGER 
The new fluorescent lights mmeas- 
ure 35,000 lumens each in bright- 
ness, about seven times as bright 
as the former conventional street 
lights. re 
By comparison, similar fluo- 
rescent lights installed by Con- 
sumers on Perry street last year 
measure only 20,000 lumens, 
“The new lamps have been avail- 
able industrially for about a year, 
but have only been' adaptable for 
street lighting purposes in the past 
few months,”’ Karkau said. 
x «* 
Karkau described the new lights, 
technically, as ‘double power 
groove largps.” : 
“Ip downtown Pontiac, the nu- 
cleus hag been ‘established for 
one of the best lighted down- 
town areas in Michigan,” said 
Karkau. 
He said installation of the lights 
would ke ,completed this week. * 
COOPERATIVE JOB 
Planning, designing and ingtglla- jon of the new lamps was 
; - (Chotinued: on Page 2, Col.    
  —*what police called “incon- | 
-iclusive results,” Tunnell 
passed a truth serum test 
Sunday. 
The serum was administered by 
Dr. John L. Abretske, of Wayne, 
an osteopath, while another expert, 
iDr. Jay B. Zee, a Detroit psycholo- 
| gist, questioned Tunnell. 
The test took place at Pontiac 
State Police post, Oakland Coun- 
y . Chief Assistant Prosecutor 
George F. Taylor assisted ‘in 
questioning. 
Also present- were several de- 
tectives from Pontiac and from 
the Redford State Police post. 
* * 
After 45 minutes of questioning, 
Tunnell was brought slowly from 
his hypnotic state. Police said he 
was ,always good fo me,” 
didn’t kill the doctor.” 
Det. Lt, William Nesbitt, com 
mander of the Pontiac Police 
Detecive Bureau 'aid Tunnell 
explained why he had lied in 
the two previous tests. 
“At first he told us he didn’t 
leave the doctor’s office at 2442 E. 
Huron St. after finding Warrick 
and calling police."’ 
LEFT IN FEAR 
“Tests proved he was lying. He 
told us that he had walked to the 
corner of Perry and Huron streets, 
about three doors away, because 
he was scared. 
“Then he denied he left the 
office for the same reason,’’ Nes- 
bitt revealed. 
‘Tunnell, who operates a_ rest 
home at 1755 Williams Lake Rd., 
was a long-time patient of War- 
rick. He was the first person to 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) 
Let's Go Skin Diving and, ‘I 
  
  had consistently said, ‘‘The doctor. AP Wirephote 
two men and a 4-year-old boy. All were from 
of the nosedive crash had not 
been determined. 
2 Warren Men, Boy Die 
in Plane Crash Near City when it started its plunge. 
The time of the crash was 4:30 
p. m. 
Hundreds of curious motorists 
and township residents con- 
verged on the area. Traffic was 
snarled both ways on busy M59. 
Sowders had paid about $500 for 
a one-eighth share in the plane 
only a week ago. 
Relatives of the two men said 
both were experienced pilots. 
*« * * 
Trebesch held’ a commercial 
pilot’s license and was seeking a 
job as a commercial airlines pilot. 
He was a clerical worker at the 
in Warren. 
Sowders avas a foreman at the 
Budd Wheel Co. in Detroit. 
8 OWN PLANE 
The plane is registered to the 
cight- member Lakeland .Fh 
Club which has a hangar at 
Pontiac Airport. 
Another member of the club, Dr. 
{Joseph L. Schirle of 330. Lorberta 
Lane, took his wife and daughter 
up in the plane shortly before 
noon. Schirle saw the crash vic- 
tims at the airport when he 
brought the plane back. 
‘Sowders and his wife were 
planning to fly the plane to 
Florida later this month for their 
10-year-old son, Steven, who is 
vacationing there with his grand- 
parents. 
Sowders told friends he wanted 
to fly yesterday “to get ae feel 
of the plane.” 
* * *« 
The exact time the victims left 
the airport could not be fixed. The 
club apparently kept no log of 
-|flights, said State Trooper Gary 
Powell of the Pontiac Post and 
Sheriff's Deputy George Lum- 
bard. 
Besides his wife, Trebesch is 
survived by three daughters, Bev- 
(Continued on Page 2, Col.“2) 
Believe Killer 
Seen in Woods State Police Close In 
on Man Thought to Be 
Marquette Escapee   
“A man’ believed to be the es- 
caped murderer of a Haze] Park 
tavern owner and his son was 
reported sighted early today in a 
tiny ‘wooded area west of Mar- 
quette. 
State Police, sheriff deputies and 
guards from the Northern: Michi- 
gan Prison at Marquette pre- 
pared to close in on Michael J. 
(Mike) Gisondi, 29, in an area 
about a quarter-mile square near 
Humboldt Junction, about 27 miles 
west of Marquette. 
The search was intensified in 
the area after a gasoline station 
was broken into last night at North 
Lake, about five miles from the 
wooded area. A leather jacket 
and some candy and food were 
stolen. 
A steady rainfall handicapped 
the searchers. 
Gisondi and his pal, Harold 
Hummel, were sentenced to life 
prison terms in 1953 by Oak- 
land County. Circuit Judge: H. 
Holland: for the 1952 “re- 
’ slayings of Vidos Vinoku- 
row, 60, and his son, Joseph, 
31, in their Oak Gardens tavern, 
21630 John R. 
One of the biggest manhunts in 
  the Marquette area‘s history has 
{Continued on Page 2, Col 
* General Motors Technical Center| 
  ve ~ 
to wap 
“and Russia in Fall.   
Rockefeller Lets 
Figures Decide 
if He Will Run Wants Public Opinion 
Polls to Tell Nixon’s 
Strength Against Dems 
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico 
(AP) — Gov. Nelson A. 
Rockefeller of New York) 
will decide by Nov. 1, on the 
basis of public opinion’ 
polls, whether he will seek 
the 1960 Republican presi- 
dential nomination. 
The governor, who 
friends he would be a can- 
didate only if he had con- 
is not likely to win against, 
the Democratic nominee. 
Rockefeller takes no stock in 
    
SAN JUAN, Puerte Rico (UPI) 
—Everybody was having their 
troubles in connection with the 
5Iist annual Governors’ Confer- 
ence here. 
Native Puerto Ricans shouted 
“Yankee, go home,” at Mrs. G. 
Mennen Williams, wife of Michi- 
gan’s governor, when she _ re- 
turned to the conference hotel. 
And relations executives 
from General Motors were 
fretting oe the treatment their 
. getting. Some 60 
‘ a similar. number 
of Redieicts shipped here espe- 
cially for use by the governors, 
were taking a beating as native 
drivers scraped fenders on high 
curbs and other cars on the nar- 
row streets. 
    polls which point to the election 
of a Democrat as president. 
Bat he apparently is unwilling to challenge Nixon unless the 
vice president unaccountably 
slips in the polls to a point where 
thev indicate one of several Dem- 
(Continued on Page z, Col. 4) is, 
teetering on the brink of 
an announcement, has told, 
clusive evidence that Vice’ 
President Richard M. Nixon + 
i 
More M uggy, 
Damp Weather 
Is on Its Way 
More muggy and damp weather 
is on its way to the Pontiac area, 
the U.S. Weather Bureau reports, 
Partly cloudy and warmer 
through tomorrow becoming humid 
tonight, is the weatherman’s pre- 
diction. Showers,are likely tomor- 
row. be 
The low tonight will be 65 dé- grees and the high tomorrow 
* 88. 
Temperatures will average about 
five degrees above 
‘high of 83 and normal low of 62 
‘for the next five days. It will 
‘remain rather warm and humid 
\until Friday or Saturday 
| The lowest recorded tempera- 
‘ture in downtown Pontiac preced-   jing 8 a.m. was 34. At 1 p.m. the], 
\reading was 78. 
  
Find 5-Year-Old Boy 
Drowned Off Beach 
A five-year-old Detroit boy 
drowned Sunday afternoon at a 
swimming beach ‘at Camp Dear- 
born in Milford Township. * 
  
      Thomas’ Baka, 
son of Mr. and 
Oakland Mrs. Edward 
Drowning | Baka, of 3580 FE. 
Tollin °*59| Kirby St., was 
3 found by an un- 
ll identifieq s wi m- 
mer in two feet 
of water, accord- 
ha Pig ing toOakland 
County _ sheriff's 
deputies. the normal} 
i 
GUESS WHO'S COMING! 
him this fall. In person. Soviet 
accepted an invitation from President Eisenhower to visit the Unit- 
ed States. The President, in turn, 
this year.   
  AP Wirephote 
— Watch for this man. You may see 
Premier Nikita Khrushchev has 
will visit the Russian leader later 
  
            The drowning took place at 5 
p.m. Deputies said the boy had 
wandered from his parents and 
had either gotten into water too 
deep for him or fainted while 
wading. 
No one saw him go cater, offi- 
cials reported. He was pronoynced 
dead by Oakland County Deputy 
Coroner Dr. W. C. Gibson of Mil- 
ford. — 
  
  Books 46 Cabins 
bearded Imam of Yemen booked 
46 cabins on the liner Sydney for 
his return home today. The 
Imam, who has been here for 
three-months of medical treat- 
at Naples after the brief train 
ride from Rome.   Nixon, Gomulka Talk 
Atter Huge’ Welcome 
Jozef Cyraniewicz. crowss 
every turn.   WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Vice President Richard M. Nixon met for more than three hours today with 
Communist chief Wladyslaw Gomulka and Premier = 
continued to cheer him at 
About 5,000 enthusiastic Poles gathered to watch 
Isoldier in a solemn cere-+ 
mony honoring Poland’s 
war dead. 
Many in the crowd cheered 
ment, was to board the Sydney /him with cries of “live 100 years,” 
a traditional cheer in Poland. 
An excited Polish worker bolt-   
Governor Is Delighted |   
KRISTIANSAND, Norway (AP) 
—Steven Rockefeller and a ap beses 
maid in his wealthy family’s hom 
plan a late summer wedding in a 
Gov. and Mrs. Nelson A. Rocke- 
ae 
formér maid in the Rockefeller 
              sand...” , \ 
    feller of New York said hey are 
delighted at their son’s engage- 
©| ment to Anne Marie Rasmussen, 
prosperous Kristiansand grocer, 
( 
AP Wirephote 
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT — Steven Rockefeller, son of 
New, York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, and Anne Marie Rasmussen, 
household, tell of their plans to 
wed. The ceremony will take place in a Lutheran chureh jn Sdegne, 
Norway, a village near the future bridée’s home town of Kristian- 
, 4 
Rocky’s Son Will Marry “She is a wonderful eirl, ” the 
governor said. 
Announcing their engagement 
21, pretty blonde daughter of a/Sunday, the young couple did not small Lutheran church in Norway. -|set'a wedding date. But @ friend 
of the Rasmussen family said it 
would probably be Aug. 22. 
x * * 
It will be performed by the Rev. 
Olav Gautestad in the Lutheran 
Church at nearby Soegne. The 
pastor is an old friend of the Ras- 
mussens. The Rockefellers are 
Baptists, 
The governor has indicated he 
and his wife will come ~ ae 
dinavia for the wedding. 
“IT can’t imagine that I would 
hot participate in the wedding of 
any of my children,” he told news- 
men Saturday. 
Steven, 23, and the third of his 
parents’ five children, first met 
Anne Marie when she came to the 
United States in 1956 to learn 
English and worked for a time as 
a maid in bis home. She left the 
Rockefeller employ —in —1957_ to 
work in a New York department 
store, then worked for an insur- 
ance firm in New York, 
FLEW To OSLO 
After serving an army hitch, 
young Rockefeller flew to’ Oslo 
July 10 and met Anne Marie. They 
came on to her home by motor- 
cycle, and the romance rumors 
-have been booming ever since. 
The girl’s father, Kristian Ras- 
mussen, appeared with the couple 
at a news conference Sunday. 
“If our daughter will be happy 
this way, we will not stop her,” 
he said, 
* * ®- 
Radiant Anne Marie, wearing’ a 
charcoal grey frock with Tos pol- 
ka dots, showed reporters her 
modest-sized engagement ring—a 
diamond surrounded by smaller 
diamonds and set in platinum. 
Steven said forms had been sent 
{Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) ~ ROME (UPI) —The black- ,Nixon place a rose wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown 
  ? 
ed through police lines and grab- 
bed Nixon in a fierce bear hug, 
almost knocking him down. 
* * * 
Polish security agents pried 
Nixon loose and pushed the man 
roughly aside. Nixon was startled 
momentarily but quickly regained 
his composure. The vice presi- 
dent's aides said the man meant 
no harm and that he wanted to 
hoist Nixon on the shoulders of the 
rowd.   Q 
    WARSAW (% — Vice Adm. Hy- 
man Rickover, touring with Vice 
President Richard M. Nixon, 
showed no interest teday in his 
birthplace, the village of Ricki 
about 50 miles southeast of War- 
saw, — 
Asked whether he intended to 
visit Ricki, he replied: ‘what 
for?’’ : 
    Foreign Minister Adam Rapacki 
author of a plan for a European 
atom-free zone which the United! 
States has rejected, sat in on 
Nixon’s mous with top Polish 
leaders. : 
* % * 
“Neexon,” ‘“Neexon,” cried 
many spectators as the Vice Pre- 
sident drove through the city in a 
black automobile flying the Amer- 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) & 
sits 
Soviet Leader 
Makes History 
in September: Eisenhower to Return 
Call Later in the Year; 
No Dates Definite 
WASHINGTON (AP) 
President Eisenhower 
and Soviet Premier Nikita 
S. Khrushchev will ex- 
change visits this fall — 
thus taking into a new 
phase of diplomacy the 
East-West differences on 
which world peace hangs. 
Khrushchev’s visit here— 
a historic first by a top 
leader of Russian Com- 
munism — will be in Sep- 
tember. Eisenhower will go 
to Moscow later in the year. 
Exact dates for the visits 
have not yet been fixed. (In Warsaw, Vice  Presidert 
Richard M. Nixon said he under- stood Khrushchev would go to the United States about Sept._15). 
Almost identical announcements 
of the plans were made here and 
in Moscow — the differences ap- parently only those of translation. 
Winding up the peace theme, the 
eas paragraph, .in the text re- 
leased by Moscow, said: 
“Both governments express 
the sagen that the forthcoming 
will promote the establish- i ment of better understa: 
between the United States and 
the U.S.S.R. and will —— 
- the cause of peace.” 
Eisenhower _ cilled a Spécial 
announcement here. Exchanges 
at this meeting with reporters 
developed also: 
BIG 3 MEET SET 
1. Before meeting with Khrush- 
chev here, Eisenhower will go to 
Europe later this month to confer 
with British Prime Minister 
Harold Macmillan, French Presi- 
dent Charles de Gaulle and West 
Germany’s Chancellor Konrad 
Adenauer. 
Tentative arrangements are being 
made in Paris to hold a meeting 
of the Western Big Four chiefs of 
government here late in August, 
reliable informants said. The plann- 
ing was still in the formative 
stage, and details still had to be 
settled. 
2. Exchanges on the question 
of Khrushchev-Eisenhower visits 
have been going on for some 
time; were initiated well before 
Vice President Richard M. 
Nixon went to Russia. 
Eisenhower said he ‘told Nixon 
on the day the vice president left 
for Russia that _negotiations in form were in progress to- 
ward an exchange of visits be- 
tween Khrushchev and himself. 
Eisenhower said he told Nixon 
not to open the subject of the ex- 
change visits, but that there was 
ino prohibition on him to discuss- 
ing the matter once the subject 
was opened up. 
* * * 
an telling of his plans to go to 
Europe to confer with the heads 
of state of Great Britain, France 
and West Germany, Eisenhower 
said coordination between the     
-|Allied powers has been zood. 
    
Naples Off Bottle Now 
NAPLES, Italy (UPI)—Normal 
water service was restored to 
this port city yesterday after a 
dry week that- put some 600,000 
Neapolitans on the bottle, The 
water supplies were cut off last 
Sunday when a landslide blocked 
a main aqueduct leading from 
the mountains, and many resi- 
dents had to resort to-beer, wine 
and soft drinks to quench their 
    
    Comics ........ decvsvenceeue 26 
County News ... ++. 2 
Biditeriale ......c.csescccens is 
Obituaries ............... .. 23 
Sports .........0..: cece e 2022 
OTR os 5 ee scr: -, % 
TV) & Radio Programs .. 33 
Stay Alive Longer ...,.... » it 
Wilson, Earl .............. ks] 
Women’s Pages ......... 15-17 
* But, he added, there are prob- 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) 
  
To Dedicate Mansion 
of Thomas Edison 
WEST ORANGE, N.J. (UPI) — 
The rambling, 23-room Victorian- 
style mansion of the tate Thomas 
A. Edison will be dedicated as a 
national monument today 
- The mansion, recognized as an 
outstanding example of Victorian 
architecture, will be turned over 
* .|to the national parks service dur- — 
sue |ing a ceremony. Known ds Glep- 
mont, it was Edison’s home for 
45 years and the scene of many 
of his inventions. 
  
48 Die Fighting Fire 
ALGIERS (UPI)—The French 
army reported yesterday that 
' 48 soldiérs were killed Saturday 
while fighting a forest fire 80 
miles ges of Constantine, The 
ae. ith flames, Home 
news: conference to make the    
a. 
               
  ae CT mee oe    | * ¥ x _*¢ “= = \ 
fe Mee : ” : . a j = , } . * / . : . : i SN yo 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1959 : ba 4 a ca 
& is ss é a , a: 
‘ a al. 
oledo Ousts Autos 
Kits Em Out Plane Crash Near City} 
of Downtown Kills 3 From. Warren 45-Day Experiment Is   
" The Day in Birmingham , 
Citizens Research Council © 
Sets Bloomfield Meeting _ 
, the City of the Straits Pythian - Lodge and of the DOKK, Pyth- 
ians. - “g   
  
BIRMINGHAM—Meyer L, Pren- 
tis, president of the Citizens Re- 
|search Council of Michigan, and * 
|nounced plans for the annual meet- 
ing of the Citizens Research Coun-   1 | (C ti d F P. O ) 
Started With Malls for on ee 
7 erly, 8, Deborah, 2, and Carol, 
Pedestrians Only 1 ! 
* *” * 14 months. 
—The ; | Sowders is survived by his wife, 
; ‘uit dite ee ‘pitas trom the Eve. ol, oe two children, Steven, 
heart of downtown’ Toledo in the! 20. and Lauri Jean, 18 months. 
start of a 43-day experiment. FLEW TO MEXICO 
Curs were banished {rom a four-) Sowders and Trebesch were 
block area and walking became eyusins. 
the only permitted mode of trans- x * 
portation, The president of the Lakeland 
«< 2 © 'Fiying Club is Joseph A. Gillis With all the hoopla accorded the Jr., Democratic state representa- 
arrival of the automobile half a tive and son of a Detroit Record. 
century ago, the pedestrian came | er's Court judge. 
into his own on the mails — the, * * 
area sealed off from traffic. | Gillis flew the same plane to 
street Mexico earlier this month. He is 
‘dou Cae: bene a trate lights |Presently on active duty with the 
ignored. In their places, 19.000 |Ait Force Reserve at Bakalor 
. iAir Force Base, Ind potted plants, 1,000 evergreens | c. «= 
and other trees are to sprout. 
Workmen have painted outlines the 43rd Carrier Wing 
on the streets where gardens and based at Selfridge Air Force Base. 
patios will be built if Toledo takes' At first it was believed Gillis 
to: the see | Was one of the victims as the 
FIGHT SHOPPING CENTERS | plane was registered to the club 
Downtown businessmen hope the) UAder his name. 
malls will serve as the inner city's) William Welke, of 752% Pontiac answer to the convenience of shop- r ‘ Trail, Walled Lake, maintenance ping centers on the outskirts. officer of the club, said the plane Like many metropolitan areas, ‘appeared to be in good condition. 
Tolede, a city of nearly a third | Government investigators were 
ot a million people, found its |0 begin a probe of the accident , Township. He called the accident} 
ihe’d been shot the night of July 24. 
Gillis is a lieutenant Colonel with |, “extremely unusual."’ 
® * * 
Even if a‘ pilot let go of the 
controls completely, Silberg said, 
the plane would tend to fly straight 
at a level altitude. 
Tunnel Is Cleared 
in Dector's Murder 
(Continued From: Page One); 
discover the doctor moments after 
  * * * 
Warrick, of 263 Chippewa St., 
died of bullet wounds at Pontiac 
General Hospital the following 
night. 
Tunnell was arrested a week 
ago by State Police and Pontiac 
police for investigation of nar- 
cotics violations. 
After further questioning about! WE KNOW WHO YOU ARE 
the murder, detectives dropped the 
narcotics charge and booked him 
for investigation of murder last 
Tuesday. 
& « * Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller found that his fame 
had preceded him as he arrived in Puerto Rico 
this weekend to attend the Governors’ Confer-   * — New York’s cil to be held Oct..15 at Bloom- 
      
ence. Rockefeller says he'll decide by Nov. 1, on 
the basis of public opinion polls, whether to seek 
the 1960 Republican presidential nomination. ys 74 
AP Wirepheote 
  
> 
Tne ruth serum test was agreed POCKEfeller Lets Figures said, ‘“I-want to clear my name.” 
downtown area choked by traf- today. é The tests differ in that a lie 
fic. Shoppers were becoming tok ft detector test cah only indicate | 
mere and more reluctant to go | The plane was traveling slowly| Whether a question is answered (Continued From Page One) 
downtown, ; j when it started its plunge, wit- correctly. The serum test makes | ocratic epponents could defeat 
nesses said. They reported the 
craft ‘‘crumpled like a bali” upon 
hitting the ground. It did not burn. 
The victims were not positively 
identified for three hours. The 
e 8 Of bodies were taken to the D. E. The idea of creating malls where Pursl 
pedestrians could roam at will Wil chard Cater Eee Home, 151 Or 
backed vigorously by Downtown 
Toledo Associates, Toledo's mer-| Rebert Forsyth, Sowders’ fath- chant group. er-in-law, said Sowders had sold 
: t 
The. ica, was suggeeted 60 tt * Pee Bese © the Detroit City Airport to buy 
American cities two years ag0 | into the Oakland County group. by Lewis Mumferd, writer and 2 i. 
city planner, who told the Inter- | Friends said Sowders had ex- 
national Congress of Lecal Pressed his desire to fly a larger Authorities at The Hague: “Ei-- plane. . 
ther the motor car will drive us - * ft all out of our cities or the cities | Officers of the flying club were 
will have to ) drive out the moter |COmpletely baffled by the crash. 
car.” --| “One of the plane’s character- City officials hope the public will 
return to public transportation, 
. which will drop shoppers off at 
the malls’ eight archway entrances. it impossible for a subject to 
lie, police said. ~ ; : . : Some of his strategists have told 
gennthe said — rere cpernte| the New York governor that his 
timing is too late. They say the 
any further about the murder and reaction to Nixon’s Soviet. visit 
were “satisfied he is innocent in wit) be a rise in the vice presi- the ier + |dent’s poll popularity at the time 
They also didn’t indicate further S°M*#*Her Plans his decision. investigation as to whether Tun- * * 
nell had misused any narcotics) But the governor insists adarr- 
which he had obtained for patients antly he will make no decision un- 
at his rest home. til fall. 
Gov. G. Mennen Williams of 
Michigan told a morning news 
conference he did not consider him. 
    
  
Japan Volcano Erupts 
KUSHIRO, Japan (UPID— 
Picturesque 4,884-foot Mt. Mea- 
kan in Japan's Akan National 
Park erupted for 15 minutes yes- 
terday, spewing flaming lava at this time. 
  
      ; “ istics is its basic stability,’ said 
Tonight, the malls, dubbed “To-!pavid Silberg, treasurer, of 6321 fedo Shoppers’ See-way,” will be st James St., West Bloomfield officially dedicated by Mayor John ;   lke, Nikifa Reveal and smoke 2,200 feet into the sky. 
Police reported no __ injuries 
among sightseers in the area. 
  
Yager and Lucas County Commis-| 
sioner Ned Skeldon while a band 
. plays “On the Mall.” = 
x * 
During the next 45 days, Tole- 
déans ‘will be surveyed and, if they Meets Polish Leader Exchange Visits Set 
(Continued*From Page One) 
lems that ought to be talked out 
between heads of government. He 
remarked that it is good for these himself a presidential candidate , 
approve of the malls, the idea (Cotitinued From Page One) coming off > right guard and leaders to see each other. Decide Whether He'll Run 
| problems, which he termed tran- 
sitory, demand his full attention, 
| the governor said. 
Williams said he had no person- 
lal choice at the moment to lead 
lthe Democratic ticket. 
“I am fond of all Democrats, 
he said. 
TOUGHER THAN: NIXON 
He said he felt Rockefeller 
jwould be a more difficult Republi- 
can choice to beat than Vice Pres- 
ident Richard M. Nixon, But, he 
said. any liberal Democrat 
iwould defeat Rockefeller. 
| Rockefeller clearly is the star so 
jfar of the 5lst annual Governor's 
Conference, opening today. 
Dressed in a conservative dark ” 
  
Local financial suit despite San Juan’s muggy Childhood will always remain with 
heat, he kept reporters laughing 
‘most of the way through a news 
‘conference in which he said he 
‘has no intention of seeking the 
presidency but— 
| He wouldn’t preclude the possi- 
| bility of completely changed cir- 
| cumstances under which he 
could become a candidate. 
It was news to him that: former 
Gov. Thomas E. Dewey had ad- 
vised him to make a decision on Rockefellers Son 
‘to Wed in Norway 
| (Continued From Page One) 
‘off Saturday for the publishing of 
the marriage banns, which in Nor- 
|way must be done three weeks 
before the wedding. But this peri- 
‘od may be reduced by the Depart- 
lment of Justice if the applicant 
| Shows cause, 
| Young-Rockefeller, a graduate 
| of Princeton University, said he 
will return to New York in Sep- 
| tember and enter one of his fam- 
| ily’s businesses. 
“This will change my life com- 
| pletely.” Anne Marie said. 
“Everything will become different 
for me. but what I have brought 
with me from the home of. my 
‘me. I will remain the one I am.” 
| * * * 
| She said she and Steven would 
\live in an apartment in New York 
‘but that they haven’t found one 
jyet. Anne Marie added that she 
iwants to keep house herself. 
' Steven said he will stay vith the 
|Rasmussens until the wedding and 
added he would like to get in some 
|fishing. Putting his’ arm around 
Anne Marie, he added, “I was   for a business session. Fo field Hills Country Club. 
* * «* 
Research council members and 
their guests will convene at 4 p.m. 
the forma! meeting will be a socia 
hour and dinner. . 
The Citizens Research Council 
is an independent, non partisan, 
| privately supported research 
agency which has been devoting 
its attention to public. affairs 
since its founding in 1916. 
Purpose of the research council 
is to promote more efficient, eco- 
nomical and responsible govern- 
ment. 
DANIEL W.. SYMONS 
Pythian Memorial Service for 
Danie] W. Symons, 91, of 544 W. 
Brown St., Birmingham, will be 
held 8 p.m, today at Manley 
Bailey Funeral Home in Birming- 
ham. 
x & 
Funeral service will be at 1:30 
p.m. tomorrow at the funeral 
home. Entombment ‘vill be in White 
Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. 
Mr. Symons died Saturday at 
St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pon- 
tiac, after a short illness. 
He was a member of First Pres- 
byterian Church of Birmingham, 
the Birmingham Knights of Pyth- 
ias Lodge,-a current member of 
Mother Claims 
Endurance Mark 
HERMOSA BEACH, Calif. (UPD 
55 hours and 37.11 minutes. 
an underwater diving 
long submersion. 
Mrs; Fisher was pronounced 
in good condition when she came 
up. 
bottle.. 
    isure lucky catching this one."   |Northridge, Calif. - llowing | Dearborn 
a past chancellor-commander of 
—A 23-year-old mother of three 
children today claimed a new 
underwater endurance record of 
Mrs. Dolores Fisher, operator of 
school, 
climbed out of the water last night 
after a doctor ordered her topside 
for an examinatign. Mrs. Fisher 
was reluctant to surface but her 
co-workers were becoming worried 
about the possible effects of the 
She wore an aqua lung during 
her stay on the pool bottom and 
was fed liquids through a squeeze 
The old record was 50 
hours and 2.43 minutes set last 
May 16 by Mrs. Alberta Jones of ; one son, Lloyd of Man- 
ton; 2}. grandchildren, 46 
great-grandchildren. 
  
Soviets Reject 
British Request Plea to Intervene in New 
Red Rebellion in Laos 
Denied by Gromyko 
GENEVA (AP)—The Soviet Un- 
ion has rejected a British plea to 
intervene in a new Communist re- 
bellion in the southeast Asian 
kingdom of Laos. 
British Foreign Secretary Sel- 
wyn Lloyd discussed thé new out- 
break of violence in what was for- 
merly French Indochina with So- 
viet Foreign Minister Andrei 
Gromyko Sunday. 
Official sources said Lloyd had 
told Gromyko that Britain is 
gravely concerned over the situa- 
tion and that“Gommuinist North 
Viet Nam, Laos’ northeastern 
neighbors, is aiding the rebels with 
men and arms, 
In rejecting this, Gromyko 
‘|claimed the Laotian government 
had violated the 1954 Indochina 
armistice, under which Laos was 
New Underwater (to vemai, neutral and establish national front government with 
Communist participation. Britain 
and the Soviet Union were co- 
chairmen of the armistice confer- 
ence, 
viet Union last ‘month had urged 
reestablishment of the Indian-Cana- 
dian - Polish Armistice Commis- 
sion which was abolished five 
months ago. Britain turned down 
that proposal after the Laotian 
the commission again. 
The Soviet foreign minister also 
denied that North Viet Nam is 
assisting the rebels. 
Escaped Murderer 
Reported Sighted 
(Continued From Page One) 
been under way since last Thurs- 
day when Gisondi threatened a   Gromyko recalled that the So- — 
government had refused to accept .         
  
ican flag and the red and white|Clasped Nixon around his middle, 
Polish banner. almost weeping. Police and Nix- 
Herbert G. Klein, Nixon's press|"’S aides went quickly to his side 
officer, reported that the calls on/49d people in the crowd set «up 
Zawadsk at Belvedcre Palace ‘he chant “stolat,” moaning “may will be adopted permanently.     the race this fall. 
As to whether all this may lead = 2 
to a summit conference of East HADN'T HEARD 
d West, Eisenhower ffect | Neith had he heard, he said, JD tM K’ Tri brushed iaat tae sta prema: of a Pedcton fy'sen seen e LOSpeCcts OL Mr. K's Trip ture question. He said such a {Javits (R-NY) that accelerating | prison, trusty garbage truck driver 
with a knife, : 
' Troepers at a roadblock on U.S. 
41 said they saw a pickup truck 
\approach without lights at about   
Stainless Steel Not New 
Stainless steel first came into this morning and on Parliament) 
Speaker Czeslaw Wycech were 
“very friendly in every respect.” 
x «+ & 
He declined to disclose what 
subjects were discussed, Nixon's 
call on Gomulka stretched out 
through lunch time. The two men 
discussed international problems. 
so intently they decided they 
might as well continue. Gomulka 
arranged to have luncheon served. 
During the ceremony at the 
tomb, one of the Nixon's well- 
wishers handed the vice president 
his 5-year-old daughter to hold. 
Nixon held the girl in his arms, 
| turned to. the crowd around him 
Cool Canadian air covered the and called out as they applauded: prominence in the early 1900’s*and 
was introduced by an English 
inventor. 
Mostly Pleasant. 
Weather Prevails 
Throughout U.S. 
By The Associated Press 
Fairly pleasant weather pre- 
vailed today in most of the coun- 
try, although it was a little cool 
in the northeast and showers 
sprinkled scattered sections.   you live 100 years.” 
x *® * 
Grinning, Nixon moved back to- 
ward his car, and the procession 
went off tothe government offices 
for calls on Communist party 
leader Wladyslaw Gomulka,- Pre- 
mier Jozef Cyrankiewicz and For- 
eign Minister Adam Rapacki. 
Earlier, Nixon paid a protocol 
call on President Aleksandr Za-w- 
adski. who had invited him to Po- 
land, and on Parliament Speaker 
Czeslaw Wycech. 
Nixon delivered a_ letter of| 
greeting from President Eisen- 
hower. conference was absolutely im- 
practical unless there were ad- 
vance indications of 
results. 
But. with the prospective collapse 
of the Geneva foreign minsiters’ 
conference, it was obvious that 
there was opening up now a new, 
higher level of exchanges which 
the Western allies hope may bring 
on the great issues between the 
East and West. 
the forthcoming Eisenhower- 
Khrushchev visits was favorable, 
* =) * though not unanimously so. 
Wycech showed Nixon the his- positive | 
First reaction in Congress to.     events would force such a decision 
‘earlier than expected. 
| Yes, Rockefeller continued, he 
| had a lot of letters urging him to 
| run. No, he hadn’t counted them, 
| but they probably ran into the 
_hundreds. What was. his re- 
| action to these and newspaper 
reports of his possible candidacy? 
- “I’m interested, like everybody 
some alteration in Soviet positions ‘else is,’’ he said with another wide 
‘grin. 
j *® * * 
He flatly rejected suggestions he 
might run for the vice presidency 
lon a ticket headed by Nixon. He 
was kind in his comments, how- 
‘ever, about his potential rival. to 
GENEVA (AP) — The prospect 
‘of a visit to the United States by 
Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev 
crisis after the collapse of the for- 
‘eign ministers conference here. 
* * * 
U. S.. British and French offi- 
cials all conceded that the con- 
ference almost certainly will end 
in disagreement~ Wednesday. The 
only reservation they’ make js that 
some unforseen and radical 
change of position by Russia could 
alter the outcome even on the fi- U.S. Eases Allied Fears ae 
|ference, which they still ardently, 
believe | desire. They apparently 
jtalks between the Sov'>t Premier 
eased Allied fears today of a dan-|and the U.S. President would open 
gerous new flareup in the Berlin up prospects for agreement at the i 
issues. 
  
1 
‘Our City Becomes 
Brightest in State 
(Continued From Page One) | Summit on at least one or two 2:45 -a.m, It stopped about 300 
from the roadblock, . they 
said, and a man jumped out and 
ran into the woods alongside the 
road. - 
Officers said they gave chase 
but lost sight of the man in the 
darkness and heavy undergrowth. 
The abandoned truck was found 
to be registered to Leander John- 
son of Negaunee, who was away 
from the home when officers 
sought to talk to him. 
They said earlier they were 
awaiting reports of thefts from 
farms in an effort to trap Gisondi. 
-Gisondi and Hummel were es- 
capees from the Ionia State 
Reformatory at the time of the   
northeast corner from Maine) “We must all work for a better! toric 5-foot mace used to preserve) S€n- Everett M. Dirksen of Illi-| Nixon, he said, “seems to bea cooperatively, Karkau said, by the 
  
  through New York and Pennsyl-|jife for our children.” 
vania and into West Virginia. * 
Temperatures ranged from the! After placing a wreath of pink 
60s into the, 40s, far below normal roses on the memorial tomb and 
in most of the region. reviewing an honor guard, Nixon 
Readings were in the 60s in a/suddenly moved toward the thou- 
narrow belt extending from Vir-|sands of spectators applauding 
ginia through the Ohio Valley and|and cheering him. The crowd gave 
the Great Lakes region into the|cries of ‘“‘long life.” One man 
upper Mississippi Valley, The 70s;broke through crying ‘‘Neexon.” 
were the rule in most other areas order inthe Polish Parliament: 
“We could use something like 
that in our Senate,” the vice pres- 
ident commented. - 
The reception Sunday was the 
most rousing Nixon had. gotten. 
For nearly 15 miles, ecstatic 
crowds cheered the delighted vice 
president and showered him with 
flowers after he arrived by plane 
  He bore down like a fullback 
except for the 80s in the southern 
and centra] plains and the South- 
. west desert region and the 50s 
near the Pacific Coast and parts 
of the northern Rockies. 
The Weather 
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report 
PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly 
eleedy and warmer threugh temorrew, 
mere humid tenight and temerrow 
a chance of thundershowers. Southerly 
winds 6-10 miles teday and tegight in- 
creasing te 10 te 16 miles tomerrew. 
Today in Pontiac 
wo temperature preceding 8 a.m. 
At @ am: Wind Velocity & m. ph. 
Direetion—South west. 
Gun sete Monday at 7:50 p.m. 
Sun rises Tuesday at §:27 a m. 
. Moon sets Monday at 7 p.m. 
Moon rises Tuesd@y at 3:34 a.m 
Downtown Temoeresteres 
6am . . ils. M. .. 78 | 
Ta.m... 61 Pl fe casatsenc 75) 
8a. m. . 6 lp. m. 16 
oa. m. 710 oD. Mm. 1% 
1am 74 
Sunday in Pontiac 
(As recorded downtown) 
Highest temperature .........6..4. Md 
Lowest temperature .........0008....54. 
temperature .. .......05 - 668 
eather—Sunny. 
Highest Noeretune 4 | Pe bere ocncened 
onan temperature 
Mean tem sb ee er 
‘eather y. 
— 
Highest and Lowest T res 
Tuts Dete in Bs Yokes 96 in 1872 E 49 in 1907 
Sunday's Temperature Chart 
61 Marquette 
        CHEERFUL INTRODUCTION 
and Polish Vice President. Oscar SASSEIES TSS 
    
Seuesesesxeuetsus tions. from Moscow. nois, Republican leader, said the leading candidate for the prize.” 
talks if suctesful could ‘‘enshrine'He thought Nixon had “handled 
the President~as the boldest and'himself with great skill under 
most determined peacemaker in|yaried and difficult circum- 
many gennerations.”’ , stances” in his tour of the. Soviet 
From Sen. Mike Mansfield of|Union and his encounters with 
Montana, assistant Democratic Premier Nikita Khrushchev. 
leader, came the comment that he; The Democratic picture was 
had no doubt Eisenhower's deci-| ejouded by the reluctance of most 
sion was prompted by “good and) o¢ that party's governors to 
sufficient reasons.’ Mansfield said speak out in favor of any par- 
there should be “no petty, partisan! tioular candidate. quibbling’’ and that he himself 
would give the President's decision 
full support. 
* * * 
But. Sen. Homer E. Capehart 
(R-Ind) protested that “it lodks 
like we're again being taken in by 
the Russians." 
Khrushchev is expected to visit     ham A. Ribicoff insisted that 
Sen. John F. ‘Kennedy (D-Mass 
party's nomination, some of his 
\colleagues were not so- sure: 
Gov. Leroy Collins of Florida 
‘said his state probably will. get   Although Connecticut Gov. Abra-| 
Washington for two or three days 
to engage in, as the announcement 
put it, informal talks with the dicted compromises will be 
reached by which all major can- behind its Sen. George A. Smath-| 
ers as a favorite son. But he pre-| 
  : AP Wirephete Via Radic 
~~ Vice President Richard Nixon 
Lange smile as they motor in 
from Warsaw's Babice military airport after Nixon's arrival from 
Moscow Sunday. Lange is a former professor at the University of 
Chicago and once headed Poland's delegation to the United Na- President. didates witl be represented on the 
x *® 
Plans are for the Russian leader 
to put in another 10 days or so 
in travel about the United States. 
The hope obviously is that 
these travels may change sonie 
of Khrushchev's ideas about the 
strength an‘ character of this 
country and its people. 
Eisenhower smilingly ‘described 
his announcement that Khrushchev 
would visit this country in Sep- 
tember and that he would return 
the visit later as one of the worst- 
kept secrets in — se: 
_ The Russian radio made the 
announcement about the time the 
was ft with news- 
men, Also there been word 
earlier from congressional sources| the mysterious bombing yester- 
that Eisenhower's news conference! day of a culvert on a mountain 
call was for the purpose. of stating| road near the village of Lefka. 
that Khrushchev was coming here. | . 
NIKITA’S BEEN HINTING _ ae Rich Near Denver 
Khrushchev: has been throwing) DENVER — The richest déposits out hints for months that he was of gold in Col were first dis- 
ready and willing to accept an if- covered in the mountains 100 miles son, including Smathers, will be 
able to control it. 
Gov. Robert B. Meyner of New 
Jersey, a prospective favorite son 
with obvious national ambitions, 
told a news conference he has no 
intentions now of becoming a can- 
didate. But he said that ‘‘if the 
stream indicated I might swim in 
a certain direction, I might." 
  
More Trouble on Cyprus 
NICOSIA, Cyprus (UPI)—Mil- 
itary authorities disclosed last 
night that they had set up road 
blocks in north Cyprus to catch 
gun-runners believed supplying 
arms to both Greek and Turkish 
gangs. The disclosure followed 
    
  - |vitation to visit the United States. ‘north of Denver, 
» 
ae ‘ Bo ‘ | 
A ; . = . a 
’ . ! at et fs 24 state’s delegation, and no one per-| nal day. Informants said the West 
will not change its" position.. 
* *.2 & | 
Negotiations have come almost 
to a standstill. The only East- 
West talk scheduled today was a 
luncheon meeting between Rus- 
sia’s Andrei A. Gromyko and 
British Foreign Secretary Selwyn 
Lloyd. The Briton was to meet 
before and after with Secretary of 
State Christian A. Herter and 
French Foreign Minister Maurice 
Couve de Murville. 
j * * * 
| Before talk arose of an invita-       ‘lied delegations here wert con- 
lecerned over what Russia would 
j}do about West Berlin when efforts 
jto reach an agreement finally col- 
‘lapsed. 
* * * 
Now Allied diplomats, especial- 
ly the British and West German, 
express the view that so long as 
high-level discussions are in pros- 
pect or under way, Khrushchev 
can be counted on to keep his 
threats against West Berlin in 
suspension. . 
; * & ft 
Lloyd and British Prime Minis- 
ter. Harold Macmillan see a 
Khrushehev . Eisenhower meeting 
as a step toward a Summit con-   
Communists Walk Out 
of Indian Parliament 
NEW DELHI, India (AP) — 
Communist members walked out 
of the India’s Parliament today 
when the government refused ‘to 
make public documents on ‘the 
in Kerala State. / 
* & ®, 
Prime Minister Nehru’'s gdvern- 
ment took over contro] of strife- 
torn Kerala Friday. It acted un- 
        ouster of the Communist regime Low. 
Enthusiasm of downtown mer- 
chants was expressed by George 
Richman, president of the Down- 
town Merchants Assn. 
  'change,"' said Richman. 
* * * 
“With the downtown area 
is the leading candidate for his|tion soon from President: Eisen-| brightened up at night, we expect. |hower to Khrushchev, all the Al-| there will now he a strong move- 
‘ment to make other improvements 
downtown. 
* ® * , 
“The lights will improve down 
town Pontiac's competitive ability 
for nighttime shoppers.” 
one of the City 
was to help 
crease fts po 
center, / 2 
lighting is a 
    erly - lighted commercial 
area tends to ‘fold up at night,’ 
while a well-lighted one tends 
new lights. | 
x * * 
he noted, 
  der a constitutional for|more in its annual light bill, 
authorizing dismissal of a stute|said. The City Commission 
government unable to rule in ac-|proved the extra expense 
cordance. with the constitution. ‘this year, . 
Pues, ae wv 
. * City Engineering Department, 
headed by John Emerson, and ders — the tavern was not robbed Consumers’ Electrical Engineering; came when a : 
Department, headed by Gordon A.. 16-year-old In 
“The merchants are very grate- 
ful to Consumers and to the City 
\Commission for making the 
Mayor Philip._E..Rowston said 
commission's aims 
wn Pontiac in- 
larity as a retail 
City Manager Walter K. Willman 
pointed out the safety factor in the 
‘The downtown area at night 
should be-a safer place for pe- 
destrian shoppers and motorists, 
  Vinokurow killings, : 
A break in the baffling mur- 
dianapolis, Ind. girl told police the 
pair had confessed the murders to 
her during their flight from Mich- 
Besides his escape from Ionia 
and Marquette, Gisondi, who stead- 
ily maintained his innocence dur- 
ing his trial, had once fled *from 
Jackson Prison where he had been 
sentenced by Judge Holland, He 
then was shifted to the tougher 
prison at Marquette. 
Survey Sees 
Bigger Year   
making it a more enjoyable place i Or U. S ° Car Ss 
vestment survey today estimated 
the 1960 automobile market at 614 
million cars, up about half a mil- 
lion from the current year. 
In an analysis of the auto indu- 
try, Value Line Investment Survey 
viewed 1960 as ‘‘a good year for 
production; an uncertain, perhaps 
even a chaotic, year for profits."’ 
It predicted the increased 
sales will come almost entirely 
from the new, smaller cars to 
be built by General Motors, Ford 
and Chrysler. 
The survey said preliminary pro- 
duction plans of these companies 
call for 600,000 of the smaller cars 
and commented: ‘We see no rea- 
son for doubting the Big Three's 
ability to sell their new cars—the 
only question is, will they make 
any money doing it?’’ 
        DETROIT W—A New York in- 
    
      
     THE mowtas PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1959 “Va 
  > 
  
State Park Visitors Post ‘a ‘National Record in 195 9 
~ WASHINGTON (UPD -- Pein til due serial anceaa 
seeking outdoor recreation made| to about $ ceuts per visit. 
a record number of visits to state| National Park Service said these parks last year, the National Park|per-visit costs have remained vir- 
‘Service has reported.‘ tually the same during the past So eo owe few years. 
Visits exceeded 237 million, a Sista cal are 6 cae 
new annual travel record and an|2,335 with an over-all acreage of 
increase of 20.5 million, or 9 per|*+405.901, cent, over 1957.   
Seven states reperiea mors (Marriage Licersel$ ¥ than 10 million visits. New York 
led with 33 million and was fol- 
lowed by California With 19.9 million; Pennsylvania, 19.5 mil- 
on “\Michigan, 18.5 million; 
, 16.9 million; Oregon, 10.5 
million, and’ Illinois, 10 million, | Judy M. smith: Northviie. 
Tent and ‘trailer camping surged| William H. Schiele, 4730 Oakgrove 94 per cent. California had the big- Barbara A. Lloyd, 4730 Oakgrove 
gest carhper clientele, reporting 3 a Fg ln Strathmore 
million camper days, - ‘* * Clare oO. Res ee Holly 
Aron 
New York and Michigan. each} Douglas J. Teasdale. reported 1.8 million camper days. Janice K. Morin, Lake ie Orion 
Other states reporting’ . a larger a A. Sartell, 879 Hollywood 
camping patronage were Pennsyl-| *"" ™ oa ons ‘ <e 
vania, Oregon, Wisconsin, Ohio} ESia"s, WanHise, Bloomfield Hills and Massachusetts. William E. Bresler, Madison ee 
Expenditures by state park Mary A. Miller, Troy ° 
agencies totaled about 73.2 mil- | Russell W. Card, Berkle 
lion dollars, down 1 per. cent Ferne E. Wilson, Farmington 
f . Som y Willt FP. Wat ‘oll 
tare was epeat Sy needles chee Thelne mute a 40 5. Y paddock 
' Donald F. Lyon, 259 N eae ae me oe i Scant Edgin, 952 Florence 
jects. —— y Davis, - 3020 Adams 
pro rigad ilonn E. Passineau, .ei4 Owego 
Revenues from operations, jin-| James K. Williams Jr., Waterford 
cluding state-owned facilities, con-| M*tenen 4. Noe. $227 Chipman ld Henski, Holl 
cessions and entrance and parking] sits yeti Wouy fil Birmingh 1957, totaling 18. 2 mili million dollars,| Richard X. Jamison, Birmingham 
James W. Luke, Bloomfield Hills 
Average cost to the. States, per| Constance L. Kainer, Bloomfield Hills 
visit, was 31 cents. Of this, 20] seo T. Bowler, 61 Merel 
cents was for operation and main-| Eleanor Schaieffer, 3395 <i 
tnance, 11 cents for capital im-| prea c. Emerson Jr, 8151° Elizabeth provements. Lake Marion T. Chrysler, Drayton Plains 
Net peration and maintenance Frank D. VanLuven, 83 Union 
cost, per visit, was abuot 12 | Phyllis J. Coley, Keego Harbor 
Wilbur K. Bradley, 105 Summit 
Delpha Fulks, Utica 
Midland Hospital Assn. | ita? MsQaugies Ju" tine sets Expansion Drive | pers /, Tien won Bittle MIDLAND (® — The Midland) David T. Gray, Oxford 
Hospital Assn. will conduct a| “is M- Watkins. Oxford 
November drive for $975,000 to| Everett Stabley, 3 Collingwood S 
finance construction of an addi- 
top to the -16h-bed Midland Carel J. ‘Vance. Ortonville” ospital. ° 
; Fred iasos association presi-| Sharon A. Werd, Oxford 
lent, said the expansion would| girreq 3. Healy, Detroit 
cost $1,065,000, but that a $90,000} Gladys V. Poclus, Holly 
grant had been received from the} Ferdinand Martin, 363 oxen Lake 
Ford Foundation and other priv-| Jessi R. Graves, 17 Iow Applications 
Loraine D. Aroma, 3617 Fioretta 
  
ate gifts would reduce the amount Trederick T. Hebenstreit, 39 E. tro-| 
      needed to $975,000. ieclen M. Bell, Highland Park 
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  87" Length—Extra Wide 
PLASTIC DRAPES 
  = FREE $1.29 
       
  Ay 
te Sp 
              
    
TUFTED CHENILLE ~ 
- Bedspreads | Twin or Full Size 
$7.95 9 | 
Value 
spreads with attrat- 
eeting base. 
Limited color selec- 
     
  Washable CRINKLE CREPE 
FULL BEDSPREADS 
           
1° 
No- ironing 
ed. Ful 
  WESTEEN or PLAID Style 
‘Blankets Regular 8 8 
$6.95 
Each 
, T2xe4" a tone -cotton-orlon blend west- 
’’ rayon-cotton-nylon in 
these popular erns 
dar Save now on 
lankets. 
Tad od ahh 
intel 
Waterproof PLASTIC 
MATTRESS. COVERS FULL or TWIN SIZE 
  
When You Buy a 
PLAYTEX PANTY BRIEF GIRDLE 
Genuine pant fefs f dar clack y ‘or wearing un- 
swim cap with each 
SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS   
Infants’ 2-Piece 
a = & Jac    
terrycloth ned 
nee Sizes 1        
       KLEINERT Ist. Quelity 
ay Grib Sheet 
  
             
                 
group, 
Choice of 2 Styles « 
Kids’ Pajamas | Regular $1-Sellers 
‘Eee 64" 
* ' Original Choice. of 3 Popular Styles 
~ Kids’ Playelothes 
Sellers 
   
        
        
aL = le n Play jumper in size 2 only — 2 
lay suit in sizes 2 to 4 and |-pc. playsuit 
in sizes | to 3. Choice of assorted colors in.this 
SHIRT ond SHORT Set 
as Piece PLAYSUIT 
97c Sellers 
59   
     
       
            
   
  
Pants or T-Toppers 
Values 1% 
to $2 f 
\ Bis selection in a8 colors. Pants 
| (© broadcloths a tw        
    Big ‘tufted chenille 
fate overlays on 
= $2.49 Value * 
BIRTHDAY BARGAIN 
    
  Conto: ties i] plas eyed ur gat slip 28 8 ¢ 
po arte ogy ~ Ree. ri 19. 
SIMMS BIRTHDAY BARGAINS : —_ black 
PLAYTEX Swim Cap 
or swim suits. Free 
nurchase. 
sive 127 film. 
prevention    
  White knit shirt fn 
short sleeve style 
. Printed crew-necked 
broadcloth shorts 
ate t 7 eel amas waist. Size 
98 N 
    
é SAVE Until 
    
    
  
| ay BARGAIN 
    
    Sheffield STEEL 
Steak Knives . 
? 97° Regular $3.95 value. Stainless steel 
blades, luster handles last a life- 
s time. Ideal for gift-giving or for 
yourself. 
  
Kodak Color Film. 
620-120-127 Size 
Reg. $1.35 Roll 
Kodacolor film in 
popular “Snap-shot 
camera size. 
dated. Limit 3 rolls.   
  E With BUILT-IN FLASH 
Brownie Starflash 
_ By EASTMAN KODAK 
Regular 99 
$10.95 j rer 
Value 
As shown—takes color snaps, 
xposure sprevention feature. - 
film. flash t bulbs and 
      
   
BELL & HOWELL Electric-Eye Camera 
ur 39” the openings automatically 
pe gu essing — just af aim and cheek 
fect. tures. Use m- for per pic mag inexpe: 
—- $1.00 
          
        
  35mm Slide 
CAMERA Complete With Case 
= 59” Esse eRe is 
        
      
  SINE is ills Pontise’s Bargain “ 
sleevelgas ¢-tope. ‘Novelty col- Store Since 1934           
       
      
           
   
   
    664 Thins ints, Tdeal ah re Rye ore windows, mould- 
Parimit 1 ast. ings 
  & white snaps. Deabie 
With 3 
2” 
  ROTHERS ‘GEZE BIRTHDAY BARGAINS 
~ EZ-FLO Ready Mixed 
White Outside Paint . 
$3.95 PER GALLON 
Ideal for fences, barns, gar- 
age etc. Interior ie exterior 
‘surfaces. Limit. 4 gallons. 
BUNGALOW VINYL LATEX, 
Anterior Wall Paints 
th PER GALLON 
apply with en el 
Seek: ae washab 
only. No limit. , 
Famous BUNGALOW OUTSIDE 
White House Paint $5.98 PER GALLON 
Ready mixed white house | 
a tS brush on. durable finish. 
BUNGALOW MELLO-GLOSS *- 
Gloss Enamel Paints. $5.98 PER GALLON 
Interior Gloss onaceat | is ed to se 
washable. Ready mixed 
right from the can. 
FORMULA ° $7.95 PER GALLON 
Paint any surface, any-' 
time, in any weather. 
Dries in 20 minutes. 
White or colors. 
PYTTTTTTTTITTTT TT TTT 
%-In.x60 Ygrd Roll 
IN ue 
  
Limit 1 ladder per customer. 
vant tw Sod 
       
                
  
      
cai 
cD 
Hage 4 
ata itl tii OE ee EM 
  
Rain or a _— Paint With 
en eS ee et a 
hile painting. Limit 2 rolls. 
eecescccccscccccssssccsosconssepaccscoasooes ; 
6-ft. Wood 
‘Step Ladders 
$5.5 37 99 
| forced steps. steel rod Pail ciation. 
CELLULOSE YARN. 
MOP HEADS 
candy, snacks, potato 
Rejuvenates sluggish 
steam irons, ends 
, lets more    
| 
: 
  ee ee mee © & 
ee eee ee ee em see ee eS ee Ree eh eee ee 
ee 
ee 
ee 
es a 
ee 
ee -_- 
- 
« 
= eo oe we ee * ae . ‘ ay py 
  
    
  
    
     
     
    
  
  
    way? . : ; * 
Jee THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 83,1959. ote ee ee 
a ing ef i ea * ‘ f : . 
Considine Finds: . ly, said, “You'll get drunk tf you (To : a 
Bill ists | fleet SPECIAL RECONDITIONED | 
Flies Thick, and Vi nRedJeéts “ma... cre neni | * Aflas Missiles. tes tc n icious on e 1960 dally newspaper ci ‘sf 49s : if 
EN ROUTE WITH NIXON—The* the Americans cna eae. on the ground ‘would go bust in) walhed p Healy, looked at his . oe 
Defense Plan- "iscludes Russian TU104 jetliner has some- ied =e Psa A pacseeisl saree short . friedd and -said, wt Bast Long eae 
pparently | Ss inven could see yon would say, 
« 170 of Ocean-Spanning thing’ the: Me, Amesioen Je don't a fountain pen that leaks, an- | Novosibirsk and Sverdlovsk have| ‘Whe is crazy now?’” : serene 
Nuclear Bombs en, a ‘ew with us, Mt “Mist” for Soviet science. been cloved to weomeaes so long i Attachments 8 ! that peo si stared : ; ‘ : The girls. fed us well. Flying The dining room of the Bolshov traveled Russ: 
WASHINGTON (AP) — A_ $39,- a oe heii fly "saat ce from Novosibirsk to Sverdlovsk, poling hssog party i ee Ural has ‘5 aarriy oe No Contract $1.25 Week. 
228,239,000 compromise defense ap-|have no trouble making the tran-|we started off with a glass of grafe|sight of a $10 bill all rod : pacar the ee ~ Se eiene e i ae Necessary ‘ Free H ome’ Demonstration OR +oi02 
propriations bill includes tojsition from conventional power to| juice, then on to a half cold Siber-|director of the Bolshoi Ural, who speaks English. She revealed 
jet, It still hits like a pebble, hits 
back if swatted and likes to join 
you at meals. build at’ least 170 Atlas 
informed sources say. 
The big Atlas is designed to car- es, jan «chicken, tough but tasty, a 
whole tomato, whole raw cucum- 
ber, black bread, cookies and cof- 
fee. Sverdiovsk's Waldorf, when it was | this 
presented in hopes of buying 100 
ten minutes, then compared it min- rubles, He examined it for a g00d| yp to a table of reporters who had         Complete Parts and Repair Service on All Cleaneds 
  ry nuclear destruction across 
oceans, IN FRACTURED ENGLISH 
Our 100- passenger plane had The girls looked out for our wel-jutely with a facsimile of a saw- 
  Cost and quantity figures on thej; waa spoke fractured English. I Atlas are secrets. Information on 
the number planned came from 
congressional sources familiar fare in other ways. The doors of|buck in a Russian book. sized glasses of vodka, smiled and, 
the TU104 are quite small. “‘Take| You could almost hear Hamil- jthree stewardesses, one of whom, : 
looking at all of us simultaneous-   
       
  in a somewhat unexpected Call Today We Sell What We Advertise! 
manner the other day. She came i : 
Gregory Oil Co. ’ Ss arto col or tee Met owe || CURT'S APPLIANCES 
    
    
    your head off,’’ Lyda recommend- |ton muttering, ‘‘Damned outrage.” 
when ever we entered or de- 
parted. never saw one of them sit down, 
during a flight except on takeoffs | 
      .Editor George Healy of tlie j 
  |fore the first takeoff. and landings. Lyda briefed us he: Now Orleans Picasa Lyda didn’t. mean hat either. with details of the appropriation 
bill. > 
The defense“ measure worked She explained about seat belts 
out Friday by Senate and House and no smoking and finished with 
conferees still needs approval by,a kindly-spoken, ‘‘These rules will 
the’ Senate and House. The House be obeyed with no_ objection.”’ 
probably will consider it on sig 
  The Russians won't tell ‘us how} 
imany of the big,. rakish TU104s 
|have been built, but we saw dozens 
parked at airports. Looks as if 
day. Then the other girls began | somebody goofed in estimating the | was standing 17th in line outside 
a forlorn’ one-holer in the mud 
| Splattered hotel where reporters 
traveling with Nixon were billet- 
ed while in Novosibirsk. No hot « 
water, of course, and many af- 
x * 
Although the bill totaleq 20 mil- 
lion dollars less than President! 
Eisenhower had asked, the confer-; 
ence committee offset this by | 
boosting the amount of money that 
the Pentagon could use from funds 
‘authorized in the past. In this 
category, it gave the Pentagon 90 
million dollars more than the 
President had sought. 
In other sections of the compro-' 
mise bill, the conferees agreed: 
* * * ae ~ i 
1. To order an increase in Na-if 
tional Guard manpower, 
  
Reserves Report 
Older Age Limit 
Change i in Polic 
  
  
  
when your toilet overfiows 
‘TOILAFLEX' 
ey permit 
Tae fl pre pe 
through the mass and] 
iswishes it down. Can’t miss! 
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©. Tapered tll gies a get 
_ © Designed fo flax at any angle © Contors sell, can’t shid around 
positive insurance ageintt stuffed 
toilet, have aT oileflex” in your home. 
 $Qe ww fully 
ar pst HARDWARE stores           
   | passing out little plastic bags. |expected volume of air traffic. A 
| It surprised them when none of | U.S. airline with that many planes fronts to olfactery senses. Scot- 
ty Reston of the New York Times   
    
       
      
    
    
       
   
    NEVER AGAIN that sick feeling| 
Toilet [at] Plunger |’ 
Ordinary i) os ngers just don't seat | 
With “Toilaflex”, expressly de- ! 
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f 
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th Totally new w Whirlpoo!® cup 
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The revolutionary Stay 
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Ban-Lon® and Lastex® spans 
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New stitch-less, self-fabric 
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Expert Corsetieres wal Fit You— 
. Second Floor      Sta 
  
  
DEW-KISSED LIPS! 
With: Dew-Kissed Lipstick. 
Creamy, smooth; guaranteed 
not to dry your lips! 
Free! Silver-plated Convert- 
ible case. Reg. 1.101 
Save 52% 
2.10 Value BOTH for 1.00 
NEW MOISTURE MAKE-UP! 
With: New Siik- Tone Moisture 
Make-up. Creamy base for a 
dewy, clear look. i 
Free! New Silk-Tone Face 
Powder. Delicate, silken. 
Save 26% , 
2.02 Value BOTH for 1.50   BEAUTIFUL HAIR! 
With: Color-Tone Shampoo. 
Washes hair with glorious 
color highlights. 
Free! Headliner. Greaseless 
hair groom. Generous tube, - r 
        _ With: Deep Cleanser with Helena Rubinstein’s 
ANNUAL BEAUTY SALE 
_ Buy one... get one free! 
Limited time only! 
  
t PUESSED 8 | ame 
ces 
MASCARA-MATIC MAGIC) HEAVENLY COMPLEXION! 
With: Mascara-Matic, the first With: Heavenly Glow Com- 
and finest automatic Water: pact Make-up in 24K gold- 
proof Mascara. trimmed zodiac design case. 
F Mascara-Remover 3- Free! Deep Cleanser with 
Oil. Reg. 1.00! Penetrel. Cleanses, smooths. 
Save 33% * Save 31% 
3.00 Value BOTH for 2.00 | 2.19 Value Both for 1.50 
- DRY SKIN? FACIAL HAIR? 
With: Nudit Face;Cream De- . 
pilatory with Super-Finish. 
Speedy ‘hair remover. Penetrel.* Cleanses, mois- 
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Free! “Pasteurized” Face Free! Heaven-Sent Talc. For ; 
Cream Special.’ Rich cream. all-over loveliness. | 
Save 36% Seve 25% 
2.32 Velue BOTH for 1.50 | 2.00 Value BOTH for 1.50 
NORMAL OR OILY SKING | BODY FRESHNESS! _ 
With: Deep Cleanser with’ With: Perfume Spray Deodor. . 
Penetrel. Cleanses, guards | ant. Fragrant, effective, anti- 
against surface biemistres. perspirant-deodorant 
~ Freel Heaven-Sent Eau de 
Toilette, Long lesting scent. Free! “Herbal” Skin Lotion. 
Freshens, “tightens” pores. 
      Seve 33% Seve 25% . Seve 38% uals 
1.88 Valve “BOTH for 1.25 2.00 Value BOTH for.1.50 2.00 Value BOTH for 1.28° 
) 4, price plus tax 
“y Waite's Cosmetics . . . Street Fleor: ; Phone FE 4-2511 
    PORTRAIT VALUE IN YEARS! 8” by 10” SILVERTONE VIGNETTE PORTRAIT 
IT’S FANTASTIC 
4.95 vatue 
PICTURE FOR ONLY 
“NO 
PURCHASE 
NECESSARY 
‘ Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. Only 
! August 4th, 5th and 6th 
10 A. M. ‘til 4:30°P.M. Each Day ——s    
  BRINGS YOU.THE FAMOUS 
HOOVER PHOTOGRAPHER NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY ... CHOICE OF PROOFS 
Children, adults and all other members of your family. All minors must be accompanied by parents 
WAITE’S . . . DOWNSTAIRS STORE . % 
  
  Teueeds Sold seas! 
HOOVER — 
POLISH rad 
$2 PAY % MONTHLY! 
e » Palohee All Hard-Surfaced Floors . 
© Scrubs and- Applies the Wax, Too 
@ Same Set of Brushes Does It All oe 
© Convenient Switch | in Handle © Modern Styling 
© Famous Hoover Quality COMPLETE WITH, TOOLS! | 
|" Myover Polishers end Cleaners . +» Waite’s... Downstairs / It Beats, as It Sweeps, as It Cleans! . 
HOOVER | 
~ CONVERTIBLE 
— §, 99> 
e 2-Speed Motor. 
© Automatic Shift 
© Throwaway Bag   
    
. 
         
    Ls 
  2: ene “THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1959 | ie os FIVE. apg aes ieee oe reas o ite Elaphe Oe . Steen , , ———aey Maroon 0 , : 4. Baldwin. at il exploration || tahte B - Jes & 
—etoned_on Alaska Glacier jeamp on Brady Glatier i the Na- Lights Better, Cheaper oe 
TONIGHT — Flare Brings Rescue for. 23" .2T ee eet" pilot for Petroleum Helicopters of 
    
SCHENECTADY: — A modern 
electric light bulb gives 10 times 
as much light as the first incandes- 
‘JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) — A sin- for the Néwment Exploration: Co.,/Lafayette, La, working anjcent lamps and at about one-tenth 
gle smoke flare, saved for use at\Ltd.,.of/ New York City. Another| Charter. ype Ff of. the cost.” -"   
v 
  just the right moment, brought | helicopter was to remove _ the 
rescue eoresalbe two men -ma/ body today oe 8 ee 
rooned seven nights and da i “on ‘the barren facé of an Sinan ‘ Bearded and weary, bruised but; 
glacier. cs not seriously hurt, were 
The flare was sighted by a heli- Robert Sheldon and Melvin Guer-|f 
copter pilot participating in rera. They survived t gh chil- 
week-old sea and air search over|iN& temperatures and heavy rain the mountains and thro ugh the the aid of a sleeping bag and 
valleys and inlets of rugged gia-|“mereency food rations. 
cier ‘hay national monument | “The first thing they wanted 
“ * : were baths,’ said Dr. Joseph O. 
Although the two were saved. Rude, who treated the men at 
Ju | : i the body of a third man remained| nea . *~ a ‘ Hospital. with the wreckage ofa helicopter! . ' i in which they crashed last sin. There's nothing seriously day at the 5,800-foot level Gilman “Tong,” he said, “nothing a few, Glacier. . days rest and food won't fix.” Dead was Robert Baldwin of) Sheldon, a geologist from Spo-, Ridgefield, Conn., a geophysicistikane, Wash., was working with’ 
      
  
SHOP TONIGHT. 
"til 9 
  GIANT 6-FOOT _ 
AIR MATTRESS 
  PICNIC CAMPING LAWN 
Fun for the whole family with this giant 72” by 32” 
heavy gauge Krene® plastic air mattress by Bardell. 
Use on the beach, as a float, as a station wagon mat- 
tress,“most anywhere. Easy to inflate with mouth or pump, Jeakproof valve. . , 
Waite’s Notions . . . Street Floor 
         \ \ fh 
lf) 
OUWLA 
_8-TRANSISTOR 
AMBASSADOR RADIO 
eae Ro iG a ai ae aie Sa 
No Money Down! 
Pay %3—30 Days 
V¥3—60 Days 
Y4—90 Days 
No Carrying Charge 
  Get carrying case, head 
phones and 4 batteries 
, with purchase for only..... 
@ Use with or without personal head phones 
@ 8 transistors pull in distant stations 
@ Has 234-inch speaker for clear sound 
@ Housed in unbreakable plastic cabinet 
@ Choice of red, ivory or black 
  Repeat of a Seil-Out! 
‘ Not 4...Not 6... 
but a special fine quality 
  
  
  10 DAYS FREE TRIAL! Prove to yourself what a value this radio is — FREE! 
    
Waite's Radios ... Downstairs Phone FE 4-2511 
     
  
  TEXTURED FIBERGLAS 
“ $0 MANY CUSTOM 
SIZES YOU SAVE THE 
COST OF CUSTOM 
MADES 
sco 6” il 
50” by 90” $ 7.99 "9B," 
72” by 63” 10.99 ge 
72" by 90" 7) Ari Ty 
104” by 63” 16.99 7° 
104” by 90” 19.99 @ 
158” by 90” 28.99 50” wide 
by 63” long 
        
    
   . aan yi i > oe 
« s 
NO IRONING Decorator Colors: EVER 
Nutmeg NO COSTLY DRY CLEANING 
a oe " @ Deep 4” pinch pleat tops, full 3" bottom hems 
© Mint @ Waite's has a complete line of drapery hardware 
® White 
Draperies .. . Fourth Floor RICH CAMEO QUALITY 
“CASCADE” DRAPERIES of 
         
       
       
    
Decorator designed to add a note 
DRIP-DRY 100% COTTON 
“BURMA” PLAID SHORT DRAPERIES ' ff 50” wide 49 
$5 pair by 45” long 
50” wide $ 6” 
pair by 63” long of light-hearted elegance to your home... 
HPS RENN eo 5 gopibncbck     
  was ptt 
Fe ng one EL owe ee 
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+ 9 EINES TS Se 
CE 
ee Secon ll eal gi Ai = Cig 
  ee oe ee 
EES Pinal pape on 
a These beautiful plaid draperies will add a 
note of elegance to any room in your home, 
Decorator designed with pinch pleat tops, 
ae 
brass rings and in fashion approved color @ Brown 
~ combinations. And they wash easily, need’ @ Russet 
ho ironing. @ Peacock 
Waite’s Draperies .-... Fourth Floor 
LEEPER 
        
        
    
Open a CCC or 30-Day 
Account and Enjoy 
Charga-Plate® Convenience           
x 
 55¢ 
"134 Long-Wearing Muslins 
1.99 Value, Twin Size 
*1.69 2.29 Volue Full Size. 1.99 
Value Cases...... 49c 
Whiter than white sturdy muslins; 
count, after washing. Lab test- 
ed and approved. tc ape ag erg 
WAITE’S OWN BELLEAIR SHEETS! 
%* Smooth Pércales 
2.79 Value, Twin Size - 
*1.99 3.09 Value Full Size. .2.39 
715¢ Value Cases... ....69e 
Sparkling white silky smooth per- 
cale; 190 count after-washing. Lab - 
tested and approved. 
  
q: Ss: 
Luxuriously soft and warm... . Washable 
100% ACRILAN 
BLANKETS | 
$12.98 Value 
‘9.98 This big fluffy blanket gives 
you the ultimate in luxury and 
warmth at a low price! Non- 
allergenic, mildew - resistant. 
Full 72’. by 90” size. Rose, 
blue, gold, green, beige. 
  
    Cannon “Salutations” 
SPREADS 
$7.99 Value 
5 @ : : 
Beautiful bold plaid accented 
with. metallic. yarns. . Easily 
washable and never needs iron- 
ing. Shrinkage controlled . .. 
lint-free. Choose from brown, 
red, green or blue. 
  Soft... Washable 
FOAM LATEX 
BED PILLOWS 
Reg. 4.99 Extra Plump 
2 For $999 
Reg. 6.99 King Size 
2 for $11.99 
Reg. 8.99 Super King 
2 for $15.99 
Removable zipper acai 
cover, Non-matting. 
  
the beautiful way to 
prevent tank dripping 
3-Pe. Set, $ Fits Tank, Lid and 3 98 All 
Seat Covers . e Tanks 
Thirsty, deep pile chenille Tankettes keep your tank 
and bathroom floor dry. Impregncted with ‘’Perma- 
uel to prevent mold and mildew. 10 decorator 
colors.   NEW-TONE TABLECLOTHS | - « » With fine lace insert 
52” by 52” 
‘2.99 90 TO” oc dcicew O89 
60” by 90” .........4.7.99 
Napkins 
Solid color cloths with a pretty lace cut-out edge and 
a darker solid color border, White, pink, gold, grey, 
aqua, pink, mocha. * 
  
Colorfest = Printed 
WILENDUR 
TABLECLOTHS 
Reg. 2.98 $197 54” by if perfect 
3.98 54” by 70” ...... 2.77 
Slight misprints. Wide range 
of flower prints. “New Vanity” 
CANNON _ TOWELS 
+p 
Reg. 98c Hand Size .....89¢ 
Reg. 39¢ Wash Cloth ....35¢ 
Pink, yellow, beige, white, blue Bath 
Size Reg. 
1.98 
  
Cannon Town & Country Heavy Quilted . . Flet 
  Dae MATTRESS 
, "9" aa PADS Reg. ; ¢ Bath \ 
98c Size T Reg. 99 -' Twin 
Reg. 69e Hand Size)... 49 3.99 $2 or Full 
Reg. 29¢ Wash Cloths .. .25c 
New fringe ends on bath and 
hand, Turquoise, mint, pink, 
yellow, beige. Heavy quality for extra wear 
and extra comfort. Sanitary 
  bleached cotton... free of: lint   Combinetion Fitted 
MATTRESS PAD 
and COVER 
wo «$399 Sa" 
Reversible combination serves 
as pad and cover too. Will not 
shift or wrinkle. Sanforized.   B. F. Goodrich 
—¥%" FOAM | 
MATTRESS PADS 
‘$599 Twin 
Reg. 8.99 Full Size ....7.99 6.99 
‘Cloth backed for longer wear. 
Washable, allergy-free.   
bs 
PHONE FE 4-2511     
  T if WAITE'S WHITE SALE... FOURTH FLOOR 
mw     iaictietteen ialitentiaaaatieeaitiiaaaiatiinei    
      
         
            
            
              
        
          
        
        
         
Birmingham’ s Traffic 
Record to Be Admired 
The City of Birmingham and its 
26,000 residents have every right to 
be proud of their “no traffic deaths” 
record for 1958. An appropriate 
award was presented to the Mayor by 
a representative of the National 
Safety Council. 
x .*«*§ * 
Such an outstanding record ~« 
does. -not come by chance. City 
officials, police officers and the 
residents themselves have all con- 
tributed to help make this achieve- 
inent possible. 
x * *       
Successful accident prevention is _ 
not easy to come by, and in all cases — 
it is a full time job that requires 100 
per cent cooperation. 
: Traffic. deaths are horrible, to say 
the least. 
x «kk * 
All cities and towns in the 
immediate .area should take stock 
of Birmingham’s outstanding 
record and work with positive 
enthusiasm to accomplish like 
results, : 
xe kk * 
Going a year without a traffic 
fatality is not impossible, as the 
above record shows. 
  Iraq’s Premier Kassem 
* Lacks Dynamic Plan 
| As a result of the recent unsuccess- 
ful Communist inspired uprising in 
Iraq, the West’s position in relation 
to that of Russia may be somewhat 
improved. 
x «kk * 
Premier Kassem had Red sup- 
port for his 1958 revolution and 
‘ welcomed it. However, as no Com- 
ee, munist is interested in the in- 
dependence of a country, quarrels 
broke out and the Premier even- 
tually removed all known Reds 
from his cabinet. They have been 
replaced with staunch anti- Com- 
munists. 
x kk * 
Last March a rebellion of Iraqi 
Nationalists aligned with President 
Nasser of the United Arab Republic 
also failed. ‘Thus Premier Kassem is 
under fire from both Communists 
and Nationalists while he strives to 
steer an independent course; 
xe & 
Recently on the anniversary of 
the revolution the Premier called 
on all Iraqis to lay aside feuds 
and grudges and to arm them- 
selves with the spirit of co-opera- 
tion. While he does have wide- 
spread popular support he hes no 
dynamic program to unite- the 
people. Just being anti-Com- 
munist and anti-Nasser aren't 
enough. > 
—— 
Doctor Education Plan 
Would Shorten Training 
A new approach to the shortage of 
medical doctors is contained in Bos- 
ton University’s announcement that 
it plans to train doctors in six years 
instead of eight and with better 
qualifications. 
The proposed plan, result of a 
a study financed by the Rocke- 
feller Foundation, makes no 
~ fundamental change in medical 
| education. Students will attend 
| a liberal arts school for two years 
and then go to medical school for 
four years. Part of that period 
_ will be spent in clinical clerkships 
| in medicine, surgery, pediatrics, 
| psychiatry, obstetrics and home 
care. 
a a 
A year. round, schedule will be 
maintained to. integrate under-grad- 
uates and graduate work ‘into “a 
yy program of general education with 
medicine as a major.” One-third of 
the. time will be devoted to non- 
‘ medical electives such as literature, 
\- geligion, ethics and history. 
e\ The United States ‘needs more 
* OR Rade’ GM) care Of the”   
  
  “THE PON TIAC PRESS ©  @ West Huron Street . Pontiac, Michigan 
MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1959 
a “ Qwned and Published Locally by The Pontiac peiiacussany , 
bi : ~ Hardt A. Pumas 
; a ee President and i 
Bevate H. Abo geaary th Joun W, ihe oo oe Jouw = = 
President an Secretary and- qree 
besliess Manager 7 Advertising Director 
Haney J. Ree. Eant M.” Tarapweit, “Guess Cc. Lyman 
Managing Editor “’ Circulation Manager * yocal eal nevecuana’ Alassified Manager 
* Manager 
nation’s expanding ‘population and 
the ever increasing demand in for- 
eign fields. It is estimated that by 
1975 our present and projected medi- 
cal schools will be able to supply 
only two-thirds of the number need- 
ed to maintain the present standards 
of medical care. . 
~*~ * * 
Boston University’s experiment 
has great possibilities. By cutting, 
the time required for medical 
education, it would lighten the 
burden on the schools and the 
students themselves and bring 
in more who are now deterred by 
the present length of training as 
well as its cost. 
  
_ ACCORDING to our private statis- 
tician, 44 per cent of motorists are 
careful drivers, and the reckless driv- 
ers are made up of 47 per cent d. 
fools and 9 per cent idiots. 
  
  
_ “THERE is no such thing as a per- 
fect tax,” says a congressman. Oh, 
yes, there is. A perfect tax is one 
the’ other fellow has to pay. 
  The Man About Town 
Contest on Aug. 11 
And Not Tomorrow Night 
- as Prevously Announced   
Must: Your attendance at the 
4-H Fair, 
  Young people who wish to enter our 
freckle contest at the Oakland County 
4-H Club Fair will have another week in 
which to groom and pamper them. The 
contest is on Tuesday evening, Aug. 11, 
instead of tomorrow evening, as has 
been announced. 
  Experimenting with an early harvest 
peach, : 
Foster Delehanty 
already has ripened fruit at his home on 
Twelve Mile Road The tree grew from the 
pit of a peach sent him from Alabama, 
and the fruit is a cross ern a peach 
and an apricot. 
  Perhaps there's something to cogitate 
upon in a letter from 
“Away Out of Proportion,” 
written in a masculine hand and with 3 
Pontiac postmark, He writes: “Most men 
in scanty attire only put themselves in 
the same class with women (un)dressed 
the same way, and succeed marvelously 
in showing off what they haven’t got.” 
  Here’s my personal congratulations to 
retiring 
. Perry J. Aspinwall 
for his 37 years of work in the railway 
police. Perry knew his job—and the yio- 
lators knew that he knew it. 
  
Champion ‘breaker into the news is the 
= 
Orville Hubbard, 
.mayor Of Dearborn. When he finds the 
headlines have gone stale, he does some- 
thing to liven them up. Orville always 
calls us “neighbors,” because Dearborn’s 
long-distance city: park is in Oakland 
County, near Milford. 
  The next monthly induction 
date for the local Army draft 
boards is Aug. 5. .The city board 
sends six men and the out-county 
beard sends 15. - 3 
  The family cat in the home of 
Mr, and Mrs. Eron Owensboro 
of Keego Harbor just dotes on corn on 
the cob—but it must be well buttered. 
  A five-foct blue racer snake was killed 
-.the.other day by 
Gerald Maxfield 
of Rochester, on some low ground near 
the Clinton River. Its mate was with it, 
but got away. The blue racer is a harm- 
less snake. 
  Dahlia blossoms that measure six inch- 
es across are reported by 
Mrs. Angela Orrison 
of Birmingham, who has them in several 
colors. 
nd 
Verbal Orchids to- 
Mrs. Nora Tressley 
of Lake Orion; 81st birthday. 
Walter Cannon 
,of Walled Lake; 85th birthday. © 
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ellore 
of Davison; golden wedding: 
Mrs. Ann Begin 
of Oxford; 85th birthday, 
Mr. and Mrs, Floyd ‘Waterman, 
of Fostoria; golden — NEA Service, lac. 
“Tt Wasn't ME Who Yelled ‘Uncle!’ ”   
David Lawrence Says:     
Nixon Appeals to Russian People 
WASHINGTON — A phenomenon 
unparalleled in the history of 
diplomacy has just occurred. It is 
of transcendent importance in the 
“struggle for world peace — a 
‘“‘sputnik,”’ it might be called, in 
the progress of 
international rela- 
tions. 
For, in the 
midst of the 
“cold war,” a 
leader of one 
nation has spoken 
‘in criticism of a 
hostile govern- 
ment directly to 
the people of 
that country. It 
was an address 
  LAWRENCE 
as tactful and yet as argumenta-- 
tive as a diplomatic note. 
The speech made by Vice 
’ President Nixon to the people of 
the Soviet Union contained little 
that had not been said before 
in the formal and informal ex- 
changes of view between the 
foreign ministers of the two 
sides at Geneva and through 
, their ambassadors for several 
years past. 
But it was of fremendous sig- 
nificance because these words 
were transmitted directly over 
the television and radio to the 
Soviet people inside their own 
borders and over their own gov- 
ernmental facilities. 
It was something that could not 
have been arranged without the 
sanction of the Soviet government 
itself, which has hitherto main- 
tained a strict censorship of what 
might be said to the Soviet people 
either through the press or over 
the air. 
a ae 
The vice president didn’t mince 
words, He made pointed criticisms. 
But they were couched in earnest, 
Polite, dignified and reasoned 
phrases. He didn’t ‘‘pull his 
punches’’ but he handled himself 
without giving offense. Ever since 
his college days when he was a 
prize debater, Richard Nixon has 
known how to argue persuasively 
«in competition with adversaries 
before big audiences. 
DIPLOMATIC GEM 
The vice president. hintselt 
worked six hours on his speech. 
He chose, his words carefully and 
covered every vital issue. It was 
a masterpiece of ‘diplomacy, yet: 
it was an effective appeal over the 
head of a government to the people 
—something that President Wood- 
row Wilson first enunciated as a 
principle in his war address of 
1917 when he said that ‘‘we have 
No quarrel with the German 
people" but. only with their auto- 
cratic government. 
It ts most unfortunate that 
inside the United States so much 
and 
  
The Country Parson 
    
  “Church members ought to be 
trying to fill our pews—if for no 
other reason than it costs thear™ 
money to —— te empty 
ones.” ~ , ~ tanus because 
: treated. 
-teeth, claws or talons, e%pecially For today it is the impact of 
the Nixon address on the course of 
the “cold war” that is alone im- 
portant. His mission was author- 
ized by President Eisenhower and 
is therefore’ associated with the 
conduct of our foreign relations. 
* * 
_ Did the Nixon trip help toward 
world peace? Did it advance the 
cause of the West in its inde- 
fatigable endeavor to find a com- 
mon ground for ‘‘getting along’’ 
lin? the dictatorship in the Krem- in? These questions are difficult -to 
answer because Khrushchev is a 
ruthless man who has been guilty 
of ordering mass murders in east- 
ern Europe, where he holds many 
countries as his captives. He is 
fanatically wedded ‘to the idea of 
world conquest by threats of mili- 
tary action, by spreading Com- 
munistic ideas and then by in- 
filtrating other governments and 
taking possession of them. 
The Soviet Premier says he 
would like to come to the United 
States when “the time is ripe.”   
Dr. William Brady Says:   
Smallest Skin Puncture 
The common name for tetanus 
is lockjaw. 
The tetanus or aw germ 
was formerly called Bacillus te- 
tani. It is now ‘ 
called Clostridium 
tetani, It is a na- 
tural inhabitant or 
parisite of the in- 
testine of domes- 
tic and wild ani- 
mals and some- 
time’ that of man. 
Hence, it is pres- 
ent in the soil, es- 
pecially manured 
soil or the soi] or 
dust of. street, 
  BRADY _ 
field, stable or anywhere about . 
was formerly called Bicillus te- 
pens or corrals. 
The tetanus germ ts rod shape 
or spindle shape with a round 
or oval swelling, the endospore. 
This spore survives long drying 
or deprivation of the conditions 
that favor the growth and multi- 
plication of disease germs in 
general — heat, moisture and 
darkness. It may even survive 
ordinary quick sterilization by 
steam or boiling. 
Th lockjaw germ itself does not 
invade or travel through the blood 
or spread through the system, as 
. Other disease germs do. It just 
lodges in a wound, burn, puncture, 
scratch or blister, maybé a trifl 
one which is soon forgotton, and 
multiplies, producing its deadly 
toxin, which is absorbed into the 
blood and causes convulsions which 
are difficult to distinguish from 
strychnine poisoning. 
A puncture by splinter, thorn or 
nail (rusty or bright) is more dan- 
gerous than a wound which bleeds, 
because the puncture may plant 
lockjaw germs in the flesh, where- 
as bleeding would perhaps wash 
the germs out. 
x * * 
Burns, Fourth of July wounds, 
cap pistol or toy fireworks wounds, 
wounds in which powder grains or 
other particles of foreign matter 
are lodge@ and wounds in which 
there is any dead or damaged 
tissue are most likely to be com- 
plicated with tetanus. If tetanus 
occurs the first symptoms, four 
to ten days after the wound, are 
“sore throat,” sti s of neck 
and inability to open mouth wide- 
ly 
I believe that still. another type | 
of wound often predisposes to te- 
it is, inmyproperly 
I refer to wounds by 
such wounds subjected to cau- 
terization. 
In my opinion the application 
of “fuming nitric acid” or the 
“actual cautery” (req hot iron) 
to a fresh wound constitutes mal- 
practice. If the doctor thinks the. 
wound cannot be disinfected by 
washing with soap and water and 
removing foreign matter at the 
time of first ald, then the only 
alternative is immediate exci- 
sion of all the tissue surrounding 
the wound — debridement. 
Cauterizing a fresh-wound in any 
circumstance is most reprehen- 
sible, in my opinion, when the doc- 
a May House Tetanus 
tor's preoccupation with this me- 
dieval practice makes him forget 
to administer tetanus toxoid or 
tetanus antitoxin at the time of 
first aid. 
Every baby should be immunized 
against tetanus at the age of three 
months. If one so immunized 
should sustain a wound of the type 
we have described more than four 
years afterward, he should be 
given a booster injection of tetanus 
toxoid plus 1,500 to 3,000 units of. 
tetanus antitoxin as prophylactic 
treatment. ~ 
Signed letters, not 
page or 100 words 
personal heaith and more than one 
long pe to 
giene, not dis- 
ease. diagnosis or treatm will - 
answered by Dr. William Brady, if a 
boa ee sel; eeerossee envelope is sent 
to. The Pontiac Press, t 1989) Michigan. 
(Copyright 1959 
  + 
' Voice of the » Peoplé   
‘TV Wrestling =} i 
Showe’ ‘Are. 
N ot Very Good for Child’   
I'm » wena fan, but how can we iaustsiccr seeped eS 
wrestle as are seen op TV. “art of sports and fair sportsmanship when such bums are allowed te 
I'm shocked to see so many youngsters _ 
attending ghat program at. such a late hour. Surely there's better 
entertaisiment for those of that. age at an earlier hour. 
< y. W.aeM, a>   ) t 
Tke’s Just Not a Believer 
in Summit Conferences 
By JAMES MARLOW 
WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi- 
dent Eisenhower's ideas on diplo- 
macy go back to the 19th century. 
That explains in part his lack of 
eagerness for a summit confer- 
ence and the great, free-rein he 
gave his late secretary of state, 
John Foster Dulles. 
* * * 
Some of his views, not stated 
publicly, can be given here on 
excellent authority. Others he has 
expressed at his news  confer- 
ences, His ideas are in the num- 
bered paragraphs below. — 
1. He does not like the modern 
development of diplomacy — sum- 
mit conferen and considers it 
a step backward for the heads of 
_ state to spend their time on work 
that belongs to specialists, like 
foreign ministers. 
Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush- 
chev is the advocate of summit 
conferences. Now British Prime 
Minister Harold Macmillan backs 
the idea. Khrushchey 
foreign ministers messenger boys 
and says: only the heavyweight 
can get things done. 
* * * 
2. Eisenhower prefers seeing 
foreign ministers enjoy the exer- 
cise of the great authority given 
them in the 19th century. He says 
their governments normally try to 
establish limits within which they 
can negotiate. 
Dulles, who ran American for- 
eign affairs like a one-man show, 
was given a freer hand by Eisen- 
hower than any American secre- 
tary of state enjoyed in this cen- 
tury, But he insisted that Eisen- 
hower approve every move before 
he made it. 
: bd * * 
3. Eisenhower considers the con- 
gress of Vienna in 1814-15, called 
to reorganize Europe, after the 
downfall of Napoleon, an example 
pf foreign ministers’ exerciging 
the ultimate in autority, doth in 
negotiating and in’ making agree- 
ments. 
Some historians, judging from 
their appraisal of the Congress of 
Vienna, might think Eisenhower 
chose an unfortunate example of 
what foreign ministers can do 
when they have the ultimate in 
authority. 
x ® 7s 
4. He has cited as an example 
of what he doesn’t like about sum- 
mit conferences the 1807 meeting 
between Napoleon and Czar Alex- 
ander I of Russia on a raft in the 
River Niemen near Tilsit. | 
That was a meeting between a 
bamboozler, Napoleon, and a half- 
baked: mystic, Alexander, who at 
first. admired’ each other, talked 
of dividing fhe world up between 
them, and then wound up fighting 
each other. 
Khrushchey has been trying for 
more than a year and a half to 
get Eisenhower into a conference considers _. with him,, At first the President 
was downright reluctant. Then he 
seemed to yield a bit. 
* Lf ey * , 
Lately he has been saying he'd 
go to the summit if the foreign 
ministers, discussing the Berlin 
problem at Geneva, showed:some 
progress, He has never said pre- 
cisely what he considers progress. 
There’s a chance a summit 
meeting might make things worse 
instead of better, And there has: 
been no tangible result from the 
first summit meeting -Eisenhow- 
er had in 1955 with Khrushchev 
and the then Soviet : Premier, 
Nikolai Bulganin. . 
These may be factors in his hes- 
itancy about trying it again. But 
the memory of the meeting be- 
tween Napoleon and Alexander 
seems to be high in his wariness 
about a second summit get-togeth- 
er. He has referred to it repeat- 
edly. 
Portraits 
By JAMES J. METCALFE 
Every morning, noon and night 
. . No matter. what your mood 
. Always da your best to show   
. A friendly attitude ... Rain 
or sunshine, snow or hail .. . Let 
others see your smile . . . What- 
ever the occasion, it.. ... Will 
well be worth your while . . . Try 
to hide your hate as much . 
As you can cover it . _ Conceal 
your grudge;>-and you will be... 
A noble hypocrite . . . The only 
time when it becomes ... A virtue 
to pretend... AS you are eager 
to regain. . . Or make another 
friend . . . And as you Strive to 
be sincere . . . The charity you 
do . . . Will be the bread the 
wind and waves . . . Will soon 
return to you. 
(Copyright 1959) 
  
~ s 
Smiles You'd better enjoy the heat 
now—think of what, it’s going to 
‘cost you next winter, + 
“w & —& 
An Ohio “lad was plached for 
blowing ‘his car's more 
than twenty minutes. It takes 
the gal friend too long to dress. 
  
THOUGHTS FOR TODAY 
And the peace of God, which 
passes all understanding, will 
keep your hear{s and your minds 
in Christ Jesus. — Philippians 
4:7. 
an 3 *® bd 
How different the peace of God 
from that of the world! It calms 
the passions, preserves the purity 
of conscience, is inseparable from 
righteousness, unites us to God 
and strengthens us against temp- 
tations. — Francois Fenelon. 
  
Case Records of a Psychologist:   
Louise is a wonderful teach- 
er, for her students will laok 
back to her for some 50 years 
hence and be forever grateful. 
You mothers and _ fathers 
should also cooperate at home . 
to enrich the minds of your 
children with inspirational 
quotations. 
now and see how impoverished 
most of their minds are. Start 
remedying that defect at once.. 
By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE 
CASE C-407: Louise G., aged 63, 
is a. wonderful English teacher, 
* * * 
“She is differ- 
ent,” a teenage 
boy informed me, 
“for she gives us 
credit for every 
quotation we 
     
           have our minds 
full of. rich gems 
of literature, 
“Until I~ took DR. ORANE her course, I couldn't recite even 
one verse of any poem or give any 
quotation from a famous man, Now 
I can quote from 68 men of the 
past. 
“And it has already helped me 
in public speaking class."’ 
BRAVO, LOUISE 
x* * * 
Just suppose you were the only 
person at the bedside of a dying 
friend; what could you quote to 
_ buoy'up his spirits? Be honest with 
yourself, 
Better get ouf your Bible NOW | 
and memorize John 3:16. Then 
turu a few pages and memorize 
amen mie ; a Test them right . tations, so reward your children 
for memorizing some of them. 
* * * 
Mrs.,.Crane andfI paid our five 
youngsters at the rate of $1 per 
book for reading any of the 66 
books in the Bible, 
Modern TV commercials will 
not help you much in making 
talks in class or in your social 
and other club memberships. But 
choice quotations will richly doc- 
ument your English themes and 
speeches, 
So teachers like Louise deserve 
a public salute. But all good pare 
ents should also cooperate at home 
by urging their youngsters to mem- 
orize a dozen choice bits of verse 
or prose. 
SOUL TONICS © 
“Man does not live by bread 
alone,”’ Christ stated,- meaning that 
there are hungers of the heart and 
soul that need nourishing. 
k «w ‘t 
In my college textbook entitled 
“Psychology Applied,"’ I thus ap- 
pended over 200 choice quotations 
at the bottoms of various pages. 
~ So drop in at your local library 
and copy at least a dozen of 
these maxims. Then reward your 
youngsters for memorizing them. 
Here are a few samples: 
Euripides: ‘‘There is no worse 
‘evil than a bad woman, and noth- 
ing has ever been produced better 
than a good one.” 
* Benjamin Franklin: -‘‘There are 
no gains without pains.’ 
* * x 
Voltaire: “There is one thing 
stronger than all the armiés of 
the world and that is an ‘idea 
whose time has come.” 
Thoreau: ‘Be not simply good — 
Be good for something,” 
Cohfucius: “A gentieman fe 
one who expects much from him- 
self but little from others.” 
Carlyle: “A nian without a pur- 
pose is like a ship without. a rud- ; der.” . 
-/ Epictetus: “Choose the best life,   
Boosts Inspirational Quotations 
for habit will make it pleasant." 
Victor Hugo: ‘When you have 
accomplished your daily task, go 
to sleep in peace; God is awake.” 
Emerson:- ‘Before a man can 
wake up and find himself fa- 
mous, it is necessary that he 
  
    
wake up and find himself.” 
Michelangelo: “Trifles make per- 
fection but perfection is no trifle.’’ 
Elihu Root: ‘‘Men do not FAIL; 
they give up TRYING.” 
J. P, Richter: “Men, like bul- 
lets, go farthest when they are 
smoothest.” 
H: W, Beecher: ‘Flowers are the 
sweetest things God ever made and 
forgot to put a. soul into.” 
Elbert Hubbard: ‘Don’t make 
excuses . . - make good.” 
* * * 
John Erskine: ‘‘Music is the only 
language in which you cannot say 
& mean or sarcastic thing.” 
Pl - a re “Dr. bapy ot W. Crane 
hes payehel al charts “ene pam- 
(Copyright 1958) 
  eo 
The Associated Press is entitled 
exclusively to the use for republ- 
cation of all local. news printed In 
this newspaper as well as all aP 
news dispairhes 
Pontiac Press fs delivered by carrier tor 45 cents a bey Fi where 
is not availble, 
      carrier service by 
mail in Oekland. bab ppeeonth Living- 
stoh.” Macomb, La and We: 
tenaw Counties cts $15. Fe year: 
po egy in teh a ee} 
in the tes 40 nga all : 
ek ‘ac, ; " 2) 
$=" a if —, . \ 
Se, 
      
  for $127,500. og 2 
. x 
  
Grand Rapids Theaters Win Settlement of Suit 
DETROIT # — A 10-year-old 
  Loeks 
Rapids. 
Loeks sought 4% million dollars federal court antitrust suit involy-|in damages for a period trom ing Grand Rapids theaters and|December 1948, to May 1959, -con- several Hollywood movie compan-|tending the W.S; Butterfield ies has been settled out of court|Theaters, Ific., of Grand Rapids, 
Judge Clitford -O’Sullivan dis- pate time capplced tn boop hiss missed the case Friday after being |from bidding on first-run movies by the companies and the Jack 
Enterprises, Inc., of Grand 
informed of a settlement accepted 'for his theater.   Tickets on Sale 
for First Time » 
sand‘were sold in the first hour 
  
eligibility to lapse. 
available. 
7W. Lawrence Street 
  THE BUSINESS INSTITUE 
Is A pproved for 
VETERANS’ TRAINING Take advantage of P. L. 550 to improve your 
education and prepare for a_ better position. 
Veterans eligible for G. I. Training have three 
years to enter training. Do not allow your 
Courses. are offered in Business Administration, 
Professional Accounting, Higher Accounting 
and Junior Accounting. Other subjects: are 
ENROLL NOW! 
Day, Half-Day, and Evening Classes Continue 
throughout, the Year. 
7 
ful or Phone Today for Information 
The Business Institute | 
Phone FE 2-3551   discussion with Soviet officials 
Tickets also were being sold at/peen planned originally for July booths which handle theater tick- 27 and then put back to Aug. 2 
ets. 
During the first week admis- 
sion was by tickets distributed 
through factories and othér or- 
ganizations, and were sold for 
2, rubles, or about 62 cents at 
the official rate of exchange, 
/Still be kept at about 50,000 a day 
‘grounds will handle. 
| Public sale, it was expected 
for the much-sought tickets. 
  
GOP Diplomat Leaves 
Estate of Three Million 
  4 
Friday. 
rary of Congress. 
        nieces. 
of 86 ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 3,195) 
American Exhibit\|JAW Political Fund] 
“MOSCOW WM — Tickets to the p 7 xhibit in Sokolniki Park Senate Rackets Committee has 
on public sale at the gate for|P0stponed for a second time a 
the first time Saturday, Two thou-jplanned preliminary hearing on 
The fair director, Harold C. Mc-|of United Auto Workers’ union 
_{Clellan, said the decision to puf|officers. 
the tickets on sale was made after 
McClellan said attendance would, Increase to 86 of 100 
‘This is about as much as the 
would thwart an unofficial market 
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) — Henry 
T. Fletcher, former Republican 
gational chairtian and career dip-| 1957. 
‘fomat, has left a personal estate 
estimated at three million dollars. 
|His will. was admitted to probate 
| -The will leaves personal papers 
\dealing with public affairs’ and 
|some personal effects to the Lib- 
The remainder of the estate is 
left in 17 equal shares to his two 
sisters and various nephews and 
Fletcher died July 11 at the age =e * 
Probe Is Postponed 
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The 
Somewhere? 
Call ahead and call back 
by telephone -|funds used to promote candidacies | 
Spokesmten said the session now 
-lis scheduled for Aug. 13. It had   
  
  
The elosed hearing is aimed at 
determining whether evidenge war- 
rants going ahead with a public 
inquiry.   
  
There's no faster, easier way to make certain 
about reservations. Or to let friends along the way 
know you may want to drop in. 
It’s the thoughtful, considerate thing 
to do—especially if you've made last-minute changes 
"in your plans. Long Distance also keeps you 
in touch with home and with important matters that 
might need your attention while you're away. Homes With Television 
  WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ The, 
iCensus Bureau reports that 86 out} 
of 100 households have a television) 
set, and eight of every 86 have| 
two or more. 
In 1950, there were sets in only) 
12 of every 100 households. 
The percentage of households 
with more than one set is on the 
rise, the. bureau said. The eight 
per cent reported for May com- 
pared with 7 per cent in January 
1958, and five per cent in April TO 
’ 
Vacations are for fun. Long Distance helps make 
sure you have your share. And aft such little cost! 
MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY 
= It's faster, more fun, to dial direct     
       poooco--------- 
You can enjoy a relaxed 5-MINUTE conversation 
ATLANTIC CITY .. . $1.50 
DECATUR........$1.35 
INDIANAPOLIS . . . . $1.10 
Of course if you talk a shorter time the cost wil] be 
less. These rates, which do not include federal tox. 
are for station-to-station calls after 6 p.m. weekdays 
and all day Sunday. 
ea eee ee ee a eee eer en ase eee 
° _ SEVEN. 
rs ° 
ae ee ee ee ee ee ee 4 
FOR ONLY 
  
  
  
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  \ \ a 
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No Phone - 
Orders, 
5 Please! 
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9.95 Folding Aluminum Chaise, same $ 80 
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$49.95 Redwood Table and Benches. In- 
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What a Collection for BEAUTY, WEAR, WARMTH, VALUE! BEAUTIFUL JACQUARD DESIGNS, PLAIDS, PLAIN COLORS! What a great big, beautiful buy! We know yow thrifty homemakers shop carefully for 
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  a5 | 
  
OPEN EVERY WEEKDAY—MONDAY THROUGH 
» SATURDAY—10:00 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. 
< bot       : : — 
PENNEY’S — DOWNTOWN: 
OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY 9:30 A. M. to 9:90 P. M. 
ALL OTHER WEEKDAYS 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. 
    <p x 
    QFE REN OO STE 
  ee ee— 
| RIGHT " # roe, Fe ae Ail v , , ¢ 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AU GUST (8, 1959     , 
  
Founding Father or Pirate?   
    
        
  
ination s cities with over one mil-- HOLLYWOOD (UPI)—National ‘wrecked by homemade bombs at! abdut 1 they'd, read in   
    
        ndicseas : - | j igencio Batista. They, \descriped Verrazano as nothing ‘Detroit Cited ds Safest |100,000 population class. Each had| Paper Cup Bombs Wreck ngraicliciry seep hae er gd Balloon From / more than ‘‘a foreigner who ino traffic fatalities in the period. brought he che tele Siac Drops to Earth in Finland eae a navagational mistake.” (Large City This Year Cuban Air Force Planes |er Fidel Castro's re 
the | ; . * NORTHFELD, .Minn. (AP) — rT, same description | a ”—The National Safe- ‘or Movi MIAMI, Fla, (AP).— Two Cy- ns talked|The State Department reports that be applied -to Christopher CHICAGO N 1 Safe-/1 60 here Major ovies { ofirar re| While 86,300,000 persons talk 
| Argue Over d lorentine |= ‘Columbus. y Council reports Detroit led the a See ee ee ve ae balloon lntanchios = 
  
  
    
  1M Dies Under T actor | lion population in traffic safety/Telefilm Associates announced one morale | Interhational Airport) the newspapers during an aver- msihee 2 the Soviet’ border, ORK (AP)—All have; There wasn’t peep from Bréoic| on vies Under ir for the first six months of 1959. terday that 160 more major motion of 1958, according to 8! The G. T. Schjeldahl Co. here vEWY ae an pe th we But. many Staten. Island resi-| MIDLAND‘ — Ignac Klozik,| Detroit recorded 26 traffic'pictures will be hitting the tele-|. Police said, abe were ee reas 75,700,000 talked! was notified that the 75-foot plas- ' Staten Island these days is askidents were outraged. They felt the 64, was killed Saturday when | deaths per 10,000 registered ve-|vision screens shortly. fourid in four Cuban planes about something they’d seen on tic bag had gome down near the r “who was Giovanni de Verra-jbridge should be called Staten tractor-he was using to pull stumps | hiclés im the period. Los Angeles) The company said it receivedionly. two exploded. The bom television: 30,100,000 about some-|town of Iomantse. It carried in- | zano?”’ . Island Bridge, and the Staten) tipped over on him at his farm and Chicago were second with 2.7/rights to the films from 20th Cen-|were made by filling paper cups thing they'd read in magazines;|strygsents to record and radio to | History telis us he was a foot-|Island Chamber of Commerce near Midland. | deaths. , itury-Fox. Included in the deal were | with nitroglycerine and sand and $8,400,000 talked about theater! proufd stations data on air pres- ‘foose Florentine who came this agreed. . _ Muskegon tied with Cedars Rap- such films as ‘‘The Razor's Edge,” attaching fuses. and 32,100,000 about ra-jsure and temperature within and | way more than 400 years ago. He se Adrian, a Latin name, means ids, lowa, and Rancisie, Wis., for ‘Grapes of Wrath,” “‘Blood and| The planes formerly belonged to rie eh cdtside the batloen. at is credited with discovering Man-| Indignantly these people will)«‘black.” {honors in the cities with 50,000 toi ‘Sand”’\ and “Seventh Heaven.” the government of ousted Cuban progra hattan and the Hudson River in point out to anyone who'll listen — 1524. that Verrazano, who sailed for the 
700 Pontiac North Hill The controversy started when French, was an out-and-out pirate. in i as rizes im Ten Shopping Plaza the state decided to do him honor.. As far as they're concerned, Cor. W. Maple Re. aeckaae It was suggested that the bridge there’s a Staten Island ferryboat Wafled Lake Rechester over New York Bay which will named after him, and that's me- 
506 Dixie : ae ve link Brooklyn and Staten Island morial enough. 
Highway - ici bear his name One outspoken Staten Islander rig ey’ $ enga 0 Drayton Plains 45 S$. 
— - s rac Sat. Telegraph Rd. ; is 4 ° ° e . P ° 9 S. Saginaw Tel-Hiron \A , W¢ First Prize Second Prize Third Prize 59S. Sasi Shopping Center oy abe y 
Opee e219 Mon to Sat. Ca a an wer $750 vibe $ Esery $ Men., Fri., Sat. _ sit 
Wee Wee se 398 Auburn - Perry x 4 ; Street : . ‘ . Avenue a | Get Details and Free Entry Blanks at Your Nearest Wrigley Super Market Then Frit sat, Thnth Fels bat, 
   
     
   BIG 14 ousic oT \\\ \s 
NORGE 2-DOOR 
REFRIGERATOR 124-Ib. TRUE FREEZER 
Automatic Defrost 
i; 2DOS WITH TRADE   
        
onde 2 Bias Vs a. > 
i 
  
  
2 Years to Pay! 
meNO DOWN 
PAYMENT! ed 
     
  Automatic 
Suds Saver 
       
FREE 
12 
CANNON 
TOWELS 
No Down Payment 
2 Years to Pay! 
meme       NORGE FREEZERS CHEST and UPRIGHT 
_ Free! 12 Cannon Towels - 
1 Year Free Service 
LATEST 1959 
NORGE | 2-cycie 
‘Automatic Washer 
Reg. $ 
te: 198 © WITH Ute       
      1 YEAR FREE SERVICE 
            
  
    
      2 YEARS | 
TO PAY! | 
i 
| | 
    Automatic 
Lint Filter           
  
       
    1 YEAR FREE SERVICE paren 
  
  Lanripey “Your Appliance Specialists” | farm, Closed Wed. Afternoons Dering June, Jniy, August | 
four OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY 
NIGHTS UNTIL 9 P.M, j 
— N. Saginaw 7 “ 5-6189 
  
          
    RES When a woman thinks 
of Fresh Dairy Foods 
She thinks of... 
Freshness makes the difference at 
Wrigley . . . the difference that 
satisfies. Shop Wrigley today... 
discover the real meaning of freshness. 
a PPPP 
LPP 
PPPLPL 
LP. - } 
¥ 
    Prices Effective Thru Tuesdey, August 4. 
We Reserve the Right te Limit Quentities. 
  nae Michigan Pinconning _ 
Mild Store Cheese 394 Beer Cheese * m 79¢ - Pinconning Medium Sharp ». 6% 
Baronet Chunk Cheese 7-02.r%9. 45¢ Longhorn Store Cheese w. 59¢ 
Romano Italian Style ore. 49¢ Wisconsin Swiss Cheese we. 7% 
Mozzarella Pizza Cheese 12-02.r%. 69¢ Wisconsin Muenster w. 69¢ 
Caraway Cheese Slices bor. rg. 43¢ Wisconsin Brick Cheese w. 69¢ 
imported Tilsitter - ber. re. 43¢ American or Pimento Sliced . 65¢ 
Provolone Italian Style S00. rg. 39¢ North Bay Extra Sharp rw. 79¢ 
Imported Sliced Swiss bon. Pts. 69¢ Danish Blue Cheese w. 99¢ 
  
Ice Cream =   
  coupon   4 to Cashier Before She Checks Your Order. 
<a Grode 1A Dozen This Coupen Geod Thre Tues., August 4 
In S Fresh Grade "A" ° c 
Oren 
¢ LARGE Eccs «6 os OQ 
Limit One Coupon Per Family 
with Coupon Has Ne Cash Valve. Please Give         coupon to Cashier Before She Checks Your Order.   
SAV a 7s 
18¢ | Gaylord Pure Creamery ; f . This Coupon Good Thru Tues., August 4 This Coupon Geed Thru Tves., 49: 4 z: 
a Del Crest Vanilla or Nespelitan 
Y-Gel. C ICE CREAM &*! Ie, 
| Limit One Coupon Per AY -¢ 
with | Coupon Has No Cash Vatue. Please Give 
   
   
            
       
  Coupon Has Ne Cash Value. Please Give 
with > to Cashier Before She Checks Your Order. 
coupen | 7 ym :   
  Buiter - wire AQ Limit One Coupon Per Family 
  
FEET wcty s Mel-O0-Spred 
  with Coupon Hes Ne Cash Valve. Please Give 
"a te Cashier Before She Checks Your Order. 
Gitage cl Cheese a5   
Tb. 4 
Corton . 
Limit One Coupon Per Family’ 
with Al Coupon Has Ne Cath Valve, Please Give coupon | te Cashier Before She Checks Your Order. 
      
2 « . 
’ ' ; . d ; : 1-Lb. Ctn. This Coupon Goed Thru Tves., August 4 » 
In Qtrs. i Wrigley's Mel-O-Spred ‘ak Ge 
¢ 21 marcarine ‘=o QS Limit One Coupon Per Family ; , 
3 : a 
  RESH DAIRY FOODS: FRESH DAIRY FOODS: FRESH DAIRY FO? ___ * FRESH DAIRY FOODS °- FRESH DAIRY FOO  w 4 
DAY, AUGUST 3,1959 + et ee   
Ike Nominates Dowling 
_ for State Dept. Post 
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Walter 
Dowling, U. S. ambassador to 
Korea, will be President Eisen. 
hower’s nominee for Assistant Sec-   THE PONTIAC PRESS, MON 
  
retary of State for European Af- ‘ane Drinking - teive, it hina bees tearacs Russians: Drinking t Up 
The S$-year-old career diplomat|in Top. American Style will replace Livingston T, Mer-|~ STOCKHOLM: Sweden’ (UPI)—|Russia via Stockholm, said the chant, who is stepping up to the|Donald Kendall, president of theldrink is produced in the Soviet Post of Deputy Undersecretary of|Pepsi-Cola Co., says that Russians|capital with raw materials brought State for Political Affairs: are ing 100,000 free Pepsi- re the United States. hibition in Mdscow. — 
Kendall, who was returning from Colas a day at the American = 
      
      
  “MABLE, WASN'T IT THRILLING FRIDAY NIGHT?— So much excitement! What a race those modified sixes put on and the ~ drawing they had for those 500 silver dollars had George’s eyeballs popping 
—They’re running modified eights tomorrow night Mable, and your favorite 
driver, Joey Fair will be there. So please be on time for a change!        
      
  Racing Every Tuesday and Friday Night 
Time Trials 7:30 P. M. Race Time 8:30 P. M. 
See the Roaring Modifieds 
_ M-39 SPEEDWAY _ 8 Miles West of Pontiac 
EM 3-6900         JU 8-1144 Gone Are Days 
of Fancy Free 
Steel Picketing 
’ PITTSBURGH (UPI) — Being 
a picket at one of the nation’s 
steel mills probably is one of the 
‘dullest jobs in the country—at a 
doliar a day. 
The current steel] striké is or- 
ganized almost to the point of 
Gone are the days of riots. | 
Gone, even, are large picket 
lines, 
A strike at a corner bakery 
anywhere in the country May 
produce more pickets at the 
front door than can be found in 
front of a large steel mill today. 
* * * 
Uniess a passerby noticed & 
sign with not-too-large print pro- 
claiming that the United Steel- 
. _workers of America are on 
strike, he probably would not 
realize that the builk of one of 
the nation’s great industries is 
strikebound. 
. It’s quiet on the picket line—so 
quiet you can hear owt drop 
on a makeshift table as.a picket 
takes a pinochle trick. 
  
It would take 300,000 hemlock 
    
    seeds to make a pound. ~ 
    
  
  TO THE DOCTORS ~ OF ar 
OAKLAND COUNTY — Asa practising physician knowing about the newest medical developments, you no doubt have read about 
an entirely new concept in mattresses developed by Simmons in consultation with members of your pro- 
fession. This new mattress is called the BACK-CARE and is the first and only mattress with a “built-in 
bedboard.” It has been demonstrated and enthusiastically received at numerous conventions of the 
AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION and at ehe recent meeting of thee AMERICAN ACADEMY 
OF GENERAL PRACTICE. 1 
REQUESTED ... SUPERVISED... 
APPROVED BY DOCTORS 
From a survey of over 100,000 doctors, prior to the engineering of BACK-CARE, Simmons was asked to research and 
develop a new firm mattress for back sufferers. (It was obvious that there was not then on the market a satisfactory 
mattress answering medical needs! ) 
During the experimental period in which dozens and dozens of new and different constructions were tested, a panel of 
leading orthopedists consulted with Simmons engineers. Finally, wheh the new scientific BACK-CARE construction 
"was perfected, these specialists tried the mattress for themselves and their patients. Their verdict... complete and 
unanimous approval. 
We want you to know that this remarkable new mattress is now on our floor and that we would be most happy to 
actually demonstrate its corrective therapeutic benefits to you. We know you will agree with many others in your profession 
who have seen or are sleeping on BACK-CARE, and acclaim this new mattress as an answer to a long felt need for low 
back syndrone relief. 
_ 
WHY BACK.CARE IS BEST FOR BACKS! .. . 
4 
  
  
  
weight and prevents “sag.” This upper layer of 312 springs adjusts to body 
contours $o that sle¢ping comfort is assured. 
The Built-in Bedboard .. . made of plywood and 
placed in the center of the mattress . . . keeps the 
spine properly aligned and exerts corrective action 
close to the back where support is needed. 
This lower layer of another 312 springs acts as a 
“floating” mechanism for the bedboard, equalizes 
  
  
        
    
        
  
      
    
    
  ? : j eae = = 
EN EVERY NIGHT: TO: 9 = Monday through Saturdey MFORT 
     
    
   
   
      
      
    
    
           
    
   
      
     
     
         
    
  FEDERAL dept. stores 
Travel easy! 
Travel seasons! 
Arnel or Chino 
TWO-SOMES 
Dork-tone coordinates ease 
you into fall, breeze you 
anywhere! Crisp Chino or 
smooth Arnel® drip dries, — 
shun wrinkles, spots, stains; — 
need little ironing. Styles will 
thrill you. In sizes 10-16. 
5% 
A. Chino paisley print solid 
skirt. Checks also. Choose 
red, green, toast or blve. 
B. Arnel overblouse and per- 
manently pleated skirt. In 
blue, red, green, toost. 
“Fr ench Cr US b” men’s, women’s . 
‘famous airline style zip-front luggage 
Light luggage that looks so handsome yet costs so little at Federal’s! 
Smooth scuff-resistant vinyl wipes clean with a damp cloth, ‘Handy zip- 
front openings make packing and upacking a breeze! Light blue or char- 
coal matching pieces. Shop now, hurry to Federal’s for huge savings! 
21" case © 24” COO oo.eseeereseeeee severe 9.98 
e 26" Seem ered b arenes ererenere 
Misses’ sleep sets, 
shorties or pj's with Look! Easy-cares! 
Racks of ‘em! Styles 
and sizes a-plenty coat, regularly 3.29 
3 99 2° 
Imagine! Wonderful Sanforized easy- Choose your favorite shorties or regu. lars, all with matching lounge. coats. 
Gay, washable prints in cotton plisse 
or broadcloth. Sizes 32-38 in group. cate cotton dresses .. . priced so low! 
Eye-catching woven plaid ginghams. 
Sizes 12 to 20 and 1614 to 24%. 
Just say, CHARGE IT at Federal’s 
’ 
/ 
      
  
  
nT ae  
      
  WINNIPEG — The province of 
Manitoba is larger than any state 
of the United States mainland ex- 
cept Texas and is larger than the 
areas of Montana and Colorado 
combined.   
. (Advertisement) 
New York, N. Y. (Special) ~ 
For the first time science has 
found a new healing substance 
shrink hemorrhoids, stop itch- 
ing, and relieve pain — without 
surgery. a 
In one hemorrhoid case after 
another,“very striking improve- 
ment” was reported and veri- 
fied by doctors’ observations. 
Pain was relieved promptly. 
And, while gently relieving 
pain, actual reduction or re- 
traction (shrinking) took place. 
And most amazing of all — 
this improvement was main- 
tained in cases where doctors’ 
observations were continued 
over a period of many months! 
In fact, results were so thor- 
ough that sufferers were able 
to make astonishing state- 
ments as “Piles have ceased to be with the astonishing ability to 
  (Advertisement) 
Science Sheaite Piles. 
New Way Without Surgery 
_ Stops Itch—Relieves Pain a problem!” And among these 
sufferers were a very wide va- 
riety of hemorrhoid conditions, 
some of 10 to 20 years’ standing. 
All this, without the use of 
narcotics, anesthetics or astrin- 
gents of any kind. The secret is 
a new healing substance (Bio- 
Dyne*)—the discovery of a 
world-famous research institu- 
tion. Already, Bio-Dyne is in 
wide use for healing injured 
tissue on all parts of the body. 
This new healing substance 
ig offered in suppository or oint- 
ment form called Preparation 
H.* Ask for individually sealed 
convenient Preparation H sob 
positories or Preparation 
ointment with special appli- 
cator. Preparation H is sold at 
all drug counters. Satisfaction 
guaranteed or money refunded. 
  *Reg. U. 8. Pat. Of. 
  Dropped Politics 
fo Fix Murders _Ex- Ambassador " Told 
~to- Set Assassinations 
of Nicaraguan Exiles 
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) —, 
Nicaragua's former ambassador 
to*Costa Rica says he quit his 
post. because President Luis Somo-' 
za’s government wanted him to! 
arrange assassinations of Nicarag-| 
uan exiles in Costa Rica. 
Dr. Leonte Herdocia, who also 
has represented hi® country at the 
United Nations and in El Salva- 
‘der, said the Somoza regime has 
ibeen waging a slander campaign 
lagainst him since he resigned in| 
and joined ‘other exiles   'March 
seeking Somova’s overthrow . | 
Declaring himself a firm oppo-! 
Nicaraguan government had tried| 
to treat him like an insane per- 
son by claiming he had been un- 
der psychiatric treatment, Herdo- 
cia denied this. 
Small Firms Given   
  
B 78 North Saginaw St. , VARS    CASH MARK 20    . 
Pontiac   
TUESDAY SUPER SPECIALS AT BAZLEY’S   
SLICED 
BACON 4 LBS.. 
FOR 
1.00   SKINLESS 
WIENERS © LBS. 
FOR 
79   Record U.S. Loans 
| WASHINGTON (UPI)—A record 
[5,582 loans: - totaling $267,042,000 
were made to small business firms 
by the government during the fis- 
cal year ended June 30, the Small 
Business Administration announced 
ey: 
| The tally compared with 4,014 
iloans totaling $194,997,000 approved 
|the previous year. 
  | * bg bd : 
| Small Business Administrator 
B. Barnes said that the j Wendell 
yearly totals was boosted by an all- 
| time high monthly volume of loan 
_activity during June—601 loans for 
' $31,588,000. : 
| Small business loans are made 
‘to finance business construction, 
/conversion or expansion, purchase 
‘of equipment and machinery, fa- 
    
  I-Lb. Limit With Meat Purchase 
BUTTER . | cilities or supplies, and to supply 
working capital when financing is 
not available elsewhere on rea- 
sonable terms. 
  
Nickel plating was first used 
| . bb. |commercially about 1870 in Eng- 
land.     
       
   G “2 
eS 
   
     1959 
B; 
2 Years to Pay! 
NO DOWN 
PAYMENT! CELEBRATING OUR 30th YEAR 12 CANNON TOWELS WITH ANY 
MAJOR APPLIANCE PURCHASE FRE now! a big 21 screen 
TH 
   
   
  5 
3 se 
IT HAS ALL THE ZENITH 
New ‘Service Saver’ super horizontal chassis — makes possible ° 
superb picture detail! Sunshine picture tube gives greatest-ever | @ 
contrast and brightness! Outstanding selectivity, rejects interfer- ; 
ence! Richest, fullest tone quality of any TV. BASE OPTIONAL. ° 
90 DAYS SAME AS CASH 
      
Only ZENITH Has Space Command Come in for a Free Demonstration for only ~ 
in 
| static-free 
FM sound!   
  , : 
consolette— 
IT 
SWIVELS! t 
brand new 
'59 model!   
FEATURES YOU WANT pe 
  nent of the Somoza family’s rule, Sid vs ; 
Herdocia told an interviewer the|4Unt were returning from a Cali- 
    
      
         
      
            
    
              She's Only 1 to Survive as 
Plane Falls: 
OKMULGEE, Okla. (AP) — “I 
found that water pond, and I just 
drank and drank, that water 
tasted so good,” said the lone sur- 
vivor of a plane: crash which’ 
killed three other persons Satur- 
day night. : 
Mrs. Jewell Lois Hamby, 43, of 
Kennett, Mo., told how she had 
spent the night near the wreck- 
age, then crawled and staggered 
Sunday morning to a_ nearby 
home. It turned out to be the 
home of the dead pilot's parents. 
Killed were pilot John L. Lane, back and found the wreckage, ob- 
scured by high weeds, about 300 
yards from their home, four miles 
northeast of here. 
Flood Waters Rise 
After Nebraska Rain 
ASHLAND, Neb. (AP) — Flood   
ly today after week-end’ rains 
which reached an unofficially re- 
ported 12 inches a few miles up- 
stream. 
Army Ducks stood by prepared 
to evacuate some 300 boy camp- 
ers, members of a Woodmen of 
the World Boys of Woodcraft, at 
to the east. 
Ld * *       35, La Habra, Calif., son of Mr. 
and Mrs, F. F. Lane of Okmulgee: ' 
Mrs. Emma Shanks, 73, and her 
sister, Mrs Agnes Tidwell, 63, 
both of Kennett. Mrs, Hamby, 
hospitalized in- serious condition, 
she, her mother, and her 
fornia visit. _. 
Mrs. Lane said Mrs. Hamby 
had appeared at their home about 
8 a.m. The Lanes took her to the 
hospital, At first the injured wom- 
an mumbled the pilot was her 
brother. Then at the hospital she 
mentioned the name Lane. 
“That must be my son,” cried damage after the torrential down- 
falls of Saturday night and early 
| Sunday. Heaviest rainfall points 
jwere Schuyler and Wahoo to the 
| north. 
water washed through basements 
in a new residential area, and 
there was flooding to the south 
near Offutt Air Force Base. - 
  
producers of frozen foods in waters swirled near Ashl ear-| » 
Camp Ashland on the Platte River |? 
Observers could make no esti-, * 
mate of expected tremendous crop! , / 
In Omaha, up to three feet of|' 
There are about 1,400 different | ® = egg / » a0. = . or pats 
TEN... -_. a THE. PONTIAC PRESS.“MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1959 cae sae Legs 3 = se % ; “e . se bie 
—— Manitoba Dwarfs States Mrs: Lane. The couple rushed) Woodrow Wilson Fund {st of collecting and processing Water Circulation High for publication the letters and 
ller Ai codrow Wilson. ‘| DETROIT — About 60 barrels 
Get Rocketere d -_., [oaeere of ¥ ot water; or 3,000 gallons circulate 
NEW YORK (UP1)—The Rocke-| The Wilson Foundation received], ough the radiator of an auto- 
feller Foundation has made a gramja grant of $175,000 for the same|mobile per hour when it is driven 
of $150,000 to be used to meet the!purpose on July 14. ja mile a minute. 
STAY ALIVE 
LONGER! We carry a full stock of the special foods and con- 
_centrates mentioned by Lelord Kordel in his wonder- 
ful “Stay Alive Longer” articles — including: 
‘LECITHIN. = ‘NUTRI-TIME GRANULES This is the famous vitamin-mineral food sup- 
( lord Kordel himself. So you = 
You know how highly Lelord Kordel thinks of plement used by ue 4 2 
lecithin. Don't let one day go by without at know it must be right! NUTRI-TIME is more 
feast’ taps. of) lecithin. Vou! lll never regret tt. than “just vitamins’ — as you'll see, once 
Ya-lb. jor only $2.49 you've tried it. Bottle of 90 tablets (average 
(2 jars for $4.49) month’s supply). is only $3.95. 
VITAL HEALTH FOODS 740 W. Huron St. Across the street from New Post Office Phone FEderal 8-198!   
        
   
       
   
        
      
        
        
   
      
        
        
           
      
          
           United States. the |= 
      
   
     
    Chicken of the 
Del Monte 
  Mich. Parae 24 Size , 
PASCAL 
CELERY 
  kw 
ATIONA FOOD STORES 
Del Monte Delicious 
FRUIT COCKTAIL 
37 00 
Chunk Tuna.... No. 303 
Cans 
Sea 
Stokely's Cream Style 
Golden Corn .. 
     
           
        
    
                
  Sweet or Buttermilk 
; 
‘ * 
a 2 
cya 
ae . a 
. ; 
+ ~ "4 E S27 f : : 
,    
      
         
       
            
     
      
         
      
         
   
  Cans ts aA 00 
  
Hickory 
  
BUY NOW AND SAVE | ~ 
  
  2 
| 121 North ae Rt Go ae ee ee 
iio iS aie Og a Mas ee aug EE: ‘Baie Wayne Gabert Your Electrical Appliance Specialist 
Saginaw Street 
fy ‘ i. eee He ee ae Open Monday and Friday 
Nights ‘til 9:00 P. M. FE 5-6189 } 
ie eel, = ee   Smoked 
       
   
     
       Whole 
or 
Half  
‘ 
     1959), THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGU ST 3; ad 4 ___ ELVEN:   
Stay Alive Longer :   
Proteins Your Key to Life, Happiness “that makes you a doer‘ 5 ake _ LELORD KORDEL 
Instaliment Nineteen 
A good look at Dave was ,eyi- 
dence that he had gone overboard 
on some diet fad. His posture 
body, was soft.and flabby. Loss of tissue had lined his once cherubic the replacement of the body’s cells 
face. His muscles sagged, and his 
whole appearance was one of weak- 
ness and dejection. ‘ ~ 
“My friend Joe,’ Dave said, ‘‘is 
a vegetarian. He got-me started on 
it. For months I ate nothing but 
vegetables.” 
* * * 
“Vegetarianism is a vicious fad,” 
I said, “‘which is responsible for 
mainutrition,. anemia, and count- 
less borderline deficiencies which 
gradually build up into major dis-| 
  
Should Eat 
for Health 
‘The Pontiac, Préss readers 
who wish to obtain a free copy 
ot Lelerd Kordel’s Better-Eat- 
ing Plan are reminded that it 
is NOT available at the Pontiac 
Press office. Applications 
should be sent in addressed to 
‘Lelord Kordel, c/o The Pontiac 
Press with a stamped, self-ad- 
dressed envelope. The letters 
will then be forwarded to the 
author. So please give our 
careworn switchboard girl a 
rest! . 
  
orders. You should have known 
better.” 
“Joe told me,’ said Dave, “that 
I'd lose weight and feel better than 
I ever had. 
“Everybody should be taught,” 
I said, ‘‘that protein is the food 
of life.” 
“The food of life,” said Dave. 
“And me trying to exist on vege- 
tables!” 
“Vegetables,” I said, 
sources of vitamins, minerals, and 
regulatory substances which you 
must have, It’s simply foolhardy 
to try to exist on vegetables alone, 
You must have protein to live— 
and to make life. Protein is your 
key to success both in living and in 
loving. It’s the essential ingrediént 
  droop|in 1828-from the Greek. It means showed extreme lassitude, and his|‘ yt 
i the tissues. 
“fil a 
definite meed,in your diet as f « 
and a man!” 
ROLE OF EINS 
The word “protein” was. coined 
that we must feed our bodies pro-| 
tein first, last, and always. 
Unlike fat, protein cannot be 
stored in the body. All the protein 
that your body ca; get is used for 
its work 24 hours a day. 
The body needs protein con- 
stantly as a tissue builder. The 
more protein you give your body 
to work with, the better the 
quality of its repairs. 
Severe cases of protein hunger 
result in edema, or water-logging 
Proteins build 
muscle tissue, They also make up 
the materials used by the endo-     _jerine glands in the manufacture of 
hormones. Hormones are secreted 
by these glands. These hormones 
jare chemical 
control your internal. activities— 
.jand even your personajities. 
x« *« * 
The hemoglobin of the blood, the 
red coloring matter of the red 
corpuscles, is largely protein. Suf- 
ficient proteins have to be present 
in the blood for it to clot readily. 
Pretein is essential for the 
growth of antibodies in ‘the blood 
—our defense against bacteria and 
toxins. : 
“The National Research Council 
says that children must get 100 
grams of protein a day,’ I told 
Dave, “and adults 70 grams, if 
kind of deficiency disease, But in 
your case, since you've been de- 
prived of complete proteins on 
your vegetable diet, I recommend 
at least 100 grams a day.” 
“How ‘ean I know,” asked 
Dave, “the amount of protein 
I’m getting in the food I eat, that 
it adds up to that 100 grams?” 
“Roughly speaking, a pound of 
meat and a half ‘cup of cottage 
cheese will furnish 100 grams of 
protein. I’ll give you a list of first- 
class protein food,” I said, ‘‘with 
the amount of protein each . con- 
tains.” 
* * * 
  
FOR COMPLETE 
INSURANCE SERVICE . CALL 
aD ANIELS AGENCY FE 3-7111 (The list I made out for Dave 
will be found in my “Better-Eating 
Plan” booklet which readers may 
have free—by sending a stamped 
    | Kordel, care of The Pontiac Press. 
\This booklet will be of special 
‘value for the 60 to 80 per cent of     
  ait WRZSREEoE jthe people who get far too little   
Special Trade-la Allowance On 
Musical -Instruments 
EZ PAY RENTAL LAYAWAY 
EDWARD'S saditaw   
       
  | protein in their diets.) 
ROLE OF VITAMENS 
‘Fifty years ago rickets of the 
our cities. Today this deforming 
| childhood disease is rare. 
During the past 40 years beriberi 
  
  
Advertisement} 
Now Many W Wear 
FALSE TEETH _ With More andl 
<= drug counter. 
’ (Advertisement) 
et ae yF gor to death fer 7% years. 
ben I found anew wondercreme. Now 
} 1 res writes Mrs. D, Ward. 
» Here's bi relief from tortures of vaginal 
itch, rectal itch, chafing, rash and eczema 
with an amazing ne scientific formula 
called LANACANE. This fast-acting, stain- 
less medicated creme kills harmful ria 
* germs while. it soothes raw, irritated and 
inflamed skin tissue. or tox scratchi 
Jo heen Don’ vodey st er all dog sweves 
| Coekavaches 3 en Guarantee 
‘Houses; Apartments. 
yories, Factories and 
Restaurants, Remain out only 
one hour. No signs used. 
Rox Ex’ Company 1014 Pontise St. Bk. Bldg. FE 8-4558   
  
  
       | and pellagra have been found to be 
i preventable. 
In hospitals and clinics the vita- 
min story is-so well known that 
people under medical supervision 
no longer sicken and die because 
of a lack of tfiem. 
* * * : 
But how well does the average 
{man know the vitamin story? Not 
decay well enough. 
“Vitamins,” I told Dave, ‘‘are 
maccessory food substances. They’re 
necessary for the metabolism of 
food and for the performance of 
important body functions. But they 
aren’t of value unless. there’s food 
to work on. They ‘can’t be substi- 
tuted for complete protein foods.” 
“Well,” said Dave, “I didn't 
know anything about protein. 
Now it looks as though I was 
pretty confused about vitamins, 
too.” 
“A lot of people are,” I said. 
“And much of that confusion is 
lcaused by failure to understand 
the basic nature of vitamins as 
essential nutrients, .. Remember, 
vitamins do not, produce energy or 
body tissues. 
However, you can't manufacture 
jeither energy. or tissue in your 
body without them, They are the 
catalysts which change the foods: 
you eat into the materials to sus 
tain your body.”’ 
“And right no now,’   
commented.   
SAVE 30% to 40% on your new Colonial Sofa? 
  «» Yes Wright custom builds 
new furnituré too... of the 
--game superior quality and 
workmanship as his re- 
upholstering work. And 
this fine furniture can be 
yours at very reasonable 
prices — because you are buy- 
ing direct from the maker, 
eliminating the usuak 
“middle-man” costs! 
i tr ee eee 
WitlAM Wrich 270 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4.0558 | me cust’ of many deapiifal tedries : 
@ Choice of spring-filea : or 
foam rubber cushions 
@ Steel reinforced fall wed betion = 
and hand-tled springs 
@ AM workmanship guaranieed 
5 yente 
° Easy bedget terms or 
00 days cash 
t 
Siete Makers 
‘and Upholsterers 
Serving Pontiac is|daily from a farm where they were 
igrown in good, mineral-rich soil, 
messengers. which! 
they’re not to suffer from some} 
self-addressed envelope to Lelord| - 
most severe type were common in|’ m ’ 
ee j . SA , “ 
Dave, ‘‘my body. could sure use 
some sustaining.” ~ 
“You should take a reliable vita-}-. 
min-mineral supplement,” ] said. 
“If we could get our foods fresh help me?” =~ 
dejected, defeated life behind we could rely on them for all OUR hid m-bunger curtain!” 
vitamin requirements. But most 
food suffers losses of important 
dietary essentials through prema- 
ture harvesting, long storage, pro- 
cessing, kitchen preparation, and 
cooking.’’ Temorrow: 
“So I should eat lots of protein,” 
said Dave, “especially meat, And 
take a vitamin-and-mineral supple- 
  Ke,” pes  tawea pena 
World. 
—_—_—_ 
  sion of this series. 
  van Do you think all this will 
“That. like asking,” . T said “if 
John L. Lewis has eyebrows! 
You'll find a renewal of strength 
All mignis coal ay _—— rom the 
Money You 
Published by 
Trade neglect for 
know-how—and lengthen your life 
instead of shortening it. Conclu- \Federal, State, Local 
Cooperation Sought WASHINGTON (UPI) — The 
Ho.use Government Opératiohs 
_|Committee Saturday recommended 
passage of a bill to set up a per- 
manent bi-partisan advisory com- 
mission on intergovernmental ‘re- 
lations,   
and vigor. And you'll never again Se wo 
be content to lead a subnormal, The legislation would create a 
permanent agency to bring to- 
gether public officials from federal, 
state and local governments, to 
promote cooperation in the solution 
of problems calling for action on 
all three levels of government. 
* * * 
  Sen. Edmund S. Muskie (D-Maine) \Petition to Return 
A similar measure, sponsored by. ment Operations Committee, 
dent. It include three sena- missed Friday under a martial!central California “ha' approved by the Sénate Govern- sceurity. - The petitnis was dis: ~ Sina Areal Falls be] 
ve. a drop of 
PS commission would consist of/law order which forbids any legal|more than 2,500 feet in Se 
25 persons appointed by the Presi-| action against the. government. icades,, 
  
  
tors, three House members, three, 
administration Officials, four state’ 
governors, three members of state, 
Legislatures, four city mayors, 
two county officials and three aid 
vate citizens. By    
  ~ Travel Adventuire with a BIG PLUS} 
.CRUISE AQUARAMA DAILY SAILINGS TO CLEVELAND DEPARTURES 3:20 P.M... .”. .SUN., MON,, TUES. , WED.   | 
Papers Is Rejected | 
LAHORE, ‘Pakistan (UPI)+The, 
Supreme Court has quashed a pe- 
tition by publisher Mian Iftikharud- 
din for the return of the newspaper 
Pakistan Times and three other) 
publications. 
The governent seized the publi- 
cations last April on grounds they |~ 
were supported by foreign inter- 
  
      and 25 other senators, has been   DEPARTURES 9; dono AM, 
698 W. Heren St. PRI; SAT. » FHURS. RETURN SAME DAY AT 10:30 P.M. 
SAILING SCHEDULES DESIGNED FOR Your COMFORT 
Enjoy a Fabulous Full Day's Treat on Scenic Waters 
ECONOMY PASSENGER AND AUTO FARES 
PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE FE 8-961) 
i 4 
    ests and endangered the nation’s 
  
Sa ie 
  
  
  
  
a 4 
NOW MORE THAN EVER 
  Over 28: Years 
    re 
MS excuse 
[i = High Porosity Paper — 
breathes new mildness into the smoke... / 
new freshness into the flavor | 
Salem research creates a eevolutlonany cigarette papér 
that | “air-softens” every puff.   
Invisible porous openings blend just the right amount. 
of fresh air with each puff to give you a cooler, 
milder smoke...a richer, fresher-tasting smoke than 
you’ve ever enjoyed before. 
Created by R. J. Reynolds Tobateo Company © 
  
e menthol fresh Rhone 
    e rich tobacco taste   
      © modern filter, too 
alem refreshes your taste r   
  sti eth4 
‘   
  i 8 i : J A i). 
  
Pro Water Diversion Foes “e eae boat te a waterway H 
Set for Last Arguments : Dems seek 
“WASHINGTON &® — Opponents) The plan is eae cenit / 
‘of Chicago’s bid to, divert more six Gréat \Lakes states and by, overnorship 
water’ from Lake Michigan will, \Canada. These jurisdictions con-, p 
present their final ‘arguments at aitend the diversion would lower the, pe 
Senate hearing next Friday. |level of the Great Lakes and threat- | Issues: in Mississippi 
‘ A Senate Publie Works Commit-| jen shipping and power Projects. | ied to Segregation 
€itee spokesman said Sens, Alexan-| ane 
der Wiley ((RiWis) "and . William Virginia Hospital Oldest | Proxmire (D-Wis) have asked for’ 
time to testify then. F RICHMOND .— A state hospitat) JACKSON, Miss. U—Democratic 
for the insane, located at Williams-|voters will wade through segrega-   
  
x *  * 
A. Public Works subcommittee burg, Va., is believed to be the/tion, liquor and party politics Tues- 
has held a series of hearings on ajoldest such institution, publicly day to pick from four candidates 
    House passed bill which would per-| supported, to be established in the jin first primary balloting for gov-' 
mit Chicago to increase its diver-'United States. | ernor. 
  
x * & | Some 450,000 voters will choose 
from a field made up of Lt. Gov, Liquor, Party Politics 
     
        
     
   
           
     
     
   
      
   
   
        
         
       
          Carroll Gartin, attorney Ross Bar- 
‘nett of Jackson, Dist. Atty.) 
iCharles Sullivan of Clarksdale, | 
and Robert Mason, a Magee 
welder. i 
The two high candidates will! 
enter a “runoff Aug. 25 to deter- 
mine the governor for. the- four 
years beginning Jan. 19. There is 
no Republican candidate in this 
Deep South state, and the gen- an Sao = 
: FOR LESS e LAS LOW AS _| ‘eral election is a mere formality. 
0 4 ; x *« * 
: OFF } Other state, legislative and 
0 ‘county offices also will be filled 
iin the primaries. : 
| The gubernatorial issues in 
iclude how to retain segregation, 
whether to keep statewide prohi- 
bition in the nation’s last dry state 
_and relationships with the national) 
Democratic party. 
| Gartin, 45, former«mayor of 
‘Laurel, has campaigned largely on IF YOU ACT Now! 
Ist PAYMENT IN SEPTEMBER       
  years as lieutenant governor. He| 
has stressed the industrial progress} 
‘during this time and the fact that! 
|Mississippi is the only state which’ 
has maintained a perfect segrega-| | 
tion record. ‘ | 
2 Cases Paralytic Polio -| 
in Michigan Last Week 
_ LANSING @®—Only two new 
icases of paralytic polio were re- 
| ported in Michigan last week, the | 
‘State’ Health Department said to- |   aes 
See AER 
lother in Bay County. 
There have been 19 paralytic’ 
polio cases recorded this year 
against 25 during the same peri 
in 1958. 
| Ofly one death from polio has 
ibeen reported — a 59-year-old | 
;woman who had not been vac- OPERATORS on DUTY 24 HRS. A DAY 
*& Room Additions — 
*& Kitchens ~ 
* Aluminum Siding 
* Garages | 
* Attics Finished FREE ESTIMATES: 
NO MONEY DOWN F.H.A. 60 Months to Pay 
BIG EAR CONSTRUCTION CO, CONSTRUCTION CO, 92 W. Huron . Pontiac cinated. One death also was re- 
corded in the corresponding pe- 
riod last year — a Lia 
youth who had not been vacel | 
nated. 
  The health department said 5 
of the 19 paralytic victims re- 
ported this year had not received 
|three or more shots of vaccine. | 
i 
  * SHELL HOMES COMPLETED   
spent 25 million hours reading its 
daily and Sunday newspapers. 
  
  
  
  | AT 
LEONARD'S 
HUNDREDS OF ITEMS 
TO CHOOSE FROM 
AT. A FRACTION 
OF THEIR COST! 
Take Advantage of Our Misfortune When Our Basement Was Flooded in the Severe Rainstorm Last Wednesday (July 29, 1959) . . . Many Items Were Slightly Damaged. . . Othersa Complete Loss . . . The Slightly 
‘Damaged Are Offered ta 5 at a Sensational Savings... In Some They Are So Low That We Are Not Allowed to Mentign Them! 
OVER 50 ITEMS TO SELECT FROM INCLUDING... 
¢ PROCTOR IRONING BOARDS —® APPLIANCES ® SAMSONITE CARD TABLES | ¢ DORMEYER ROTISSERIES © SAMSONITE CHAIRS © SERVING TRAYS 
© LUGGAGE | 
} © MANY © HANDBAGS - ! NY OTHER ee 
REMEMBER: These Are Slightly Soiled 
‘LEONARD'S   | 
% 
FIRST COME 
FIRST 
SERVED!   
  
SAVE AS 
YOU HAVE 
NEVER 
SAVED; 
_ BEFORE   
                
      
  “a 20 N. Perry St. rntown Pontia , ——— erry 51 Downtown Pontiac 
aS ‘ , his experience, gained during eight. | +5” ee tee" | ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 1959 
                 
   
     
     
    ~ SPATTER | - ASPHALT 
TILE A: ~| 
9, Sie Ea. 
Bang or Exterior , COUNTER TORS 
of All Finishes 1/3 off n>] 69 Gal. @ Alkyd Flat . 2.98 PAINT Mica, Vinyl 
@ House Paint 2.98 - 
i-Gless . .2.98 
° ieee 2.98 We Are Your Authorized 
@ Vinyl Flot . 2.98 SANDRAN DEALER @ Gloss Enam’l 2.98 
@ Porch, Deck 2.98. } 
@ Ext. Primer 2.98 
NATIONALLY ADVERTISED    
    
        duction but is factory | 
authorized .. . which 
meons that all stock will 
be retagged from $5.95    
  
    
Your Choice         
        
       
          
  
  
  
FACTORY 
AUTHORIZED 
Sg OFF . CLOSE-OUT 
PURE VINYL TILE 
9x9x¥e Qe Ea. 
Famous Name Brand ARMSTRONG 
REAL CORK TILE 
9x9" ]2Q¢ Es. 
di You Don't Buy Your Tile From Us We Both Lose Money!       
          
Regular 
Price 
    1055 West Huron Street 
FREE PARKING 
Thurs., Fri. Pontiac 
FE 8-3717 
Open Mon., ‘til 9 — Tues., Wed., Sat. ‘til 6 : - 
    
‘day. One was in Detroit and the #    
  IRE SALE!) _ PRICES ‘SLASHED -- BIG VACATION-TIME: 
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS 
ARMSTRONG I itd ARMSTRONG | 
  WS 
  750/14 $@) #95 , MIRACLE TIRES 4 Ply Zo TUBELESS! ‘ Bi eee F’300/14. .$24.95 ) 710/15. $24.95   
FIRST LINE!- FULL ROAD HAZARD #8 7/15. .$29.95 
Goreme arent Blackwalfs $2.00 Per Tire Less! 
ALL SIZES ON SALE—TUBELESS, 
TUBED, BLACKS, WHITES 
THE RUGGED RHINO awe, ARMSTRONG'S Economy’ Tire =#it.3 @ SAFETY SKID GRIP ... @ POSITIVE TRACTION 
@ LOW IN COST @ HIGH IN DEPENDABILITY 
@ FULL ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE WITHOUT TIME LIMIT 
750/14 7 950 . o. White Tubeless 
670/15 | 450 600/16 10°» 850/14. .$26.95 | 760/15. .$26.95 
  
670/15. .$21.95 
  
    ~ ~ 
S ~ 
YL \ “rh,   oy 
   
  Black Tubed 
  
DURING CARLOAD SALE ALL ‘SALE PRICES ARE PLUS © 
in ANY OLD TIRE! ... come In AND saver 
PLUS: 
~The EASIEST BUDGET TERMS 
in TOWN!!! | IF YQU NEED TIRES — ONE TO A FULL SET — BUY NOW AT THESE LOW, LOW 
PRICES AND SAVE: « « « TIRES OF THIS QUALITY WILL NEVER COST Lae 
-MacDONALD TIRE CO. “Where Only the Tires Are Inflated, Never the Prices” 
370 S. Soginew St. | FE 5-6136 -- Pontiac   <5 
a 4 / 
f a : 
/ t 
# . ‘ 
. 
f . e- f * é 
’ = . 
<a : 5 
+ 
SEES STE Rae a  THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1959 to 
  
Bare’ Americans 
Seeking Control 
      (Campus Youth - 
jHas New Shoe 
gaid todeg he could have sold the|: Wuth Squared-Off ‘Toe, 
Volkswagen” Automobile Co, 10} Often: Suede times over” during his just-com- : cS. 
pleted trip to the United States. 
He said, however, that the fed- 
eral government would see that the|** off in high fashion this fall 
}company remains in German 
hands even after its Projected we continental shoes. 
turn to private enterprise. 
company, originally founded, by|°f the Italian styles that never ithe Nazis, is under a trusteeship|quite made the grade with college 
pending a final decision on wheth-;men. . _ 
er it-is owned by the federal gov-| The mew shoe is slim, trim and 
ernment or the government of lightweight, in keeping with the 
Lower Saxony state. shorter jackets, - oc lepate 
= and softer tailoring of men’s 
\Statehood Vote Not New | clothes. 
r a In smooth, grained and_tex- - HONOLULU—As early as in 1940|tured leathers, the new style is 
a two-to-one vote for statehood|featherlight, though cut a little 
~~ registered = a =n fuller than the old Italian shoe. 
scite on the question by the) the gently squared-off toe and people af Hawaii. tapered silhouette make for a 
isnug, comfortable fit. Extra flex- 
wememmen ible, the leather sole is cropped 
Speci Combination Offer jeri AYS. ONLY! 
‘Get this Wagon, full of soap, with your new | (genie LAUNORY § 
     
          
      
  DRYING ONLY.......   CASHING 
ON | ones 20: 
. Frigidaire Quick Clean 371. Auburn Ave. , ; Free Parking 
  sree   
    
       
         
     
        
     
            
   
     
             
     
           
             
   
            
     
    
   
    x * * 
American male is often seen in 
    
          
         
    
     
   of smooth, grained and 
brushed leathers in moc-front, 
islip-on and blucher styles with 
two- and three-eyelet ties. 
Straps with buckles on side or 
center decorate as they close. 
Moccasins- and dress - casuals 
alike boast prominent stitching. 
The newest in men’s colors, 
“true brown’ —with yellow and 
|ivy undertones, rates straight ‘‘A” 
\for dress and casuals, blending 
well with slacks and suits of tan, 
brown and blue. 
Oak and hemlock, the darker 
shades of this rich brown family, 
are popular with muted autumn 
clothes,   
  
  
| Prison Inmate 
| Invents Games 
| for Children   
  
Penitentiary inmate has found new 
hope for his future—in eane s 
games, 
Roy Weightman, who es served Fu SIZE COASTER. ‘WAGON 
filled with a large supply of soap 
This is a strong, substantially-built, —all-metal 
wagory finished in bright red. Disc wheels with . 
balidon rubber tires. An ideal play wagon for the 
children. 
NEW SPEED QUEEN WASHER @f 
This is the famous, double-wall Speed 
Queen washer. Has super-duty ,alumi- 
num wringer, bowl-shaped 20-galion 
tub. Steel chassis construction and many 
other deluxe features! 
| |} NO MONEY: DOWN DOUBLE WALL W& “This is going to set me 
straight,” he said. “It’s a whole 
new life for me. A guy /searches 
and searches to find his‘own spe- 
cial field. I've found mine.” 
Weightman is serving a 10-to. 
25-year sentence from Summit 
County for armed robbery, After 
release here he must serve ad- 
ditional time in Jackson, Mich.,     Prapevnpetiespacytones. -visreacoadie OR inadusrn yaa. Wie 
Bs A > ea ties - asf 
aaa og 
    Ris ais 
    ae _ 
1. SRA caine Seer 
    ey worries are over, In addition to 
: royalties on the’ games, he says SPEED QUEEN WASHER he had been offered a good job ws 
“ ‘ : Phon e a game designer. ‘ f E der »/ His games now in production are ( a# 
Gerd ," “Rocket to the 
OPEN MONDAY 2-714 Moon,” “Hot Rod Racers,” “Pin 
NIGHT UNTIL 9 108 NORTH SAGINAW and Sink” and “World Animal 
Hunt."’ 
  
Last year the per capita con- 
sumption of newsprint in the   ‘jane Lindrati, minister of pob| 1p 1g. Light in Weight! 
In class and dorm, the young) ° 
COLUMBUS, Ohio w — An Ohio} 
But Weightman figures his mon- 
  
      United States was 76.2 Ibs.   
  
—no matter. which you preter —" 
© GLASSES or CONTACT LENSES NU:VISION PRESCRIBES and FITS Them to Your Individual Needs Whatever your visual needs and preference — let Nu-Vision serve you efficiently _ and expertly! If your choice is Glasses, you can be assured of the widest’ selection ‘ of the latest attractive frame styles. If your choice is Contact Lenses — you can expect to be fitted with the newest, most comfortable invisible. lenses available and by the most modern slentife methods. Whatever your choice, you're right to be _ ‘fitted by Nu-Vision. * 
NU. VISION  stopios _109 N. SAGINAW ST. 
_ Phone FE aio    ‘ 
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OFFICE ‘HOURS Daily 9:30 to 5 P. M. 
(PP 
                
            
       
    
          , ° SAVERBROOK FINE QUALITY ASCE : 
Designers Ot 
” QU: &      
     
   | MON. & TUES. ONLY 
AMERICA'S DEPENDABLE FOOD MERCHANT 
    
  
  5-LB. 
BOX 2.89 
Save on These Fresh Fruit Specials Mon. and Tues. 
KREY 2 12%-0Z. 
BRAND CANS 
2-LB. 
PKG. 
* 
10%4-0Z. 
ea CAN 10c 
LIBBY’S 
Spaghetti and Come See... You'll Save ot AGP! $ | 
ROUND STEAKS SIRLOIN STEAKS PORTERHOUSE 
C c|@ .09 lb ib. || 5 
Fresh Mushrooms. ... . tox 39¢ 
. _ 
“SUPER -RIGHT” GUARANTEED- cnt 
Ground Beef = me a. AQe 
“SUPER-RIGHT” ROLL STYLE 
1-48. a 
Pork Sausage & = 25« LOWEST PRICE IN 5 YEARS! BUY PLENTY NOW! .- 
Medium Shrimp «» « 59. | 
z THOMPSON CALIFORNIA, SWEET 
Seedless Grapes 2 2%) CAROLINA, ELBERTA FREESTONE . | | 
Fresh Peaches 5 us 3% 
Salisbury Steak 89 
Fig Bars EERAND s Ss s 8s 6 3% 
a tan ¢ ANN PAGE — Tomato Soup FINE QUALITY 
SAVE 10c! 
JANE PARKER SPECIAL 
@ 
Apple Pie ppre en Meat Balls 
2 = 6% 
2: 8% 8-INCH , Size one 39c 
_ | | 
oo ecw 59 Marvel -Iee Cream 
   Large Eggs .isise. . 
-Cuban Pineappl ostusann nicer. 20% Oc 
‘dexola Oi eM eT . x AQ Save on Butter and Biscuits 
| BORDEN’S, BALLARD’S, 
6% LAND O' LAKgs 
Butter ... && 
SUNNYFIELD FINEST QUALITY 
| 8. Butter eeeses OTEs. PILLSBURY OR PUFFIN 
BISCUITS 
(3-2 Butter... xm 63¢ 
WHITE = COLORED 
Northern Tissue 
42. ~ 1.00     
tea Tuewdey Aug. 4th All —s in this ad effective thru 
    THREE HANDY 4-20 PACKAGES | 
a 
    
 2 ee 7 = — is ~ im os - ba ¢ 7 = fe a ” ¥ be a 4 7 ¥ Po a ia | 
* = S = ON . x . . ; - < * } j 
Pe \ r od , . ’ * i - ee ° ¥ % | : jp “ ‘ + - 
z . : : Po . ; F , a : / : : an P 
- ~ “ i 
‘ ~ OURTEEN 
- Record d Selling 
Listed in June      
  ad tory arenes” ” Summerfield six billion dollars higher than in 
June 
“ 
a ee ae ct ee en” cone ae en ee 
haw Se 
st 
| 
RNR 
© 
Sat 
ie 
ae 
sia 2 sic 
    ee # 
<a $600 Million Increase 
Over All-Time High 
Achieved This May 
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Manufac- 
turers rang up record sales in 
~ June, the Commerce Department the ‘reported Sunday, 
It is estimated the sales total, | 
seasonally adjusted, at $31,300,000,- 
000. This was an increase of $600,- 
000,000 from May, the former rec-| 
ord high. 
New orders in June rose about 
2 per cent while the backlog of 
unfilled orders was reduced as a |   x rr 
000,000 worth of goods to their in- 
ventories, on a seasonally correct- 
ed basis; in June. The inventory 
total of $51,900,000,000 compared 
with. $50,300,000,000 a year earlier. 
New orders totaled $31,100,000,- 
'000 for the month, a rise of a 
(000,000 from May. 
Pope John Pens 
Drivers’ Prayer 
tor Guidance 
VATICAN CITY —Pope John,   
    
See... 
  Get Plane and Steamship 
Space ... Use AAA’s 
Complete 
TRAVEL 
BUREAU FLY TODAY] i motorists. 
‘ated man in Thine image,’ it be- 
ns, “let us drivers feel qur great 
\responsibility and show us the way 
of charity and prudence . . . 
x * * 
“Immaculate Virgin, guide us in 
‘our earthly journey, defend us 
from dangers of the soul and body 
and make us good and patient to- 
ward persons who are under our 
care .. 
| “Angels . . saints, give us 
| strong faith by which to dedicate 
our life to God and keep us ready 
for the last journey to the eternal 
homeland. " 
  
Mortgage Financing 
‘Program Is Extended 
  SERVICE Agents for All Air & Ship Lines 
  
  
             
  WASHINGTON (UPI)—A_ gov- 
ernment program: to provide other- 
|wise unavailable mortgage finan- 
provide longer life.   
  
Let 
  Dry Cleaning 
KEEPS YOUR CLOTHES * 
COOLER AND FRESHER 
us help you and ae 4 
family keep that well 
groomed look with Regular 
Dry Cleaning! 
GENEY DRY CLEANERS 12 W. Pike St. 
Pick-Up and Delivery 
We Will Be Closed for FE 5-6107 
Park Near Our Door 
Vacation ‘til August 10th Manufacturers adlied about $500,- 
(XXIII has written a prayer for | 'D, H. Lawrence novel. An appeals 
“Almighty God, who hath cre-' was aviemesse Curb Is Sought - || ACLU Against © More! 
Powers to Censor Books | 
in the Mails . 
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The’ 
American Civil Liberties Union 
has appealed to Gongress fo deny 
proposed new censorship: powers 
to Postmaster Géneral Arthur S. 
Summerfield, who recently tried 
to ban from the mails the novel 
“Lady Chatterley’s Lover.” 
Ernest Angell, chairman of the 
| organization, said Summerfield had| 
a “notoriously poor . . . record of, 
| judgement.”’ This was an apparent | 
‘reference to Summerfield’s ban on) 
ithe unexpurgated version of the|       ‘court overturned the_ ban. 
Angell said the Administra- 
tion’s censorship proposals would 
grant ‘vague powers’’ that 
might be unconstitutional. 
He testified before a House Post 
Office subcommittee Friday at 
hearings on a bill designed to 
crack down on the use of the mails | 
to peddle lewd or filthy literature 
or to promote fraudulent money 
schenies. 
Herbert B. Warburton, general 
counsel for the Post Office Depart- 
    
|simflar Russian and Rumanian ment, urged enactment of the bill. 
It would give Summerfield the 
power to impound mail for 45 days| 
instead of the present 20 days in: 
cases where the mails allegedly 
are used for obscene or fraudulent 
material. 
*The bill also would let the Post- 
master General impound such mail 
in the public interest.’’ The present 
standard is only ‘‘for the enforce- 
ment of this act.” | 
  
Russian and Rumanian diplomats. 
The Red diplomats will not be 
permitted outside a 25-mile radius 
from Buenos Aires without special 
permission from Argentine author- 
ities. 
The move was in retaliation for 
restrictions on the movement of 
Argentine diplomats in_ those 
countries. 
‘The dif between a smart! 
and a dumb one, a ty-| 
coon was telling some friends, is   
  that you can fire the dumb one . .. 
A wife we know must be rather 
stupid because she asked how to 
get her husband a low golf bandi- 
jcap for his birthday. She said it 
‘was something he’d always wanted. 
—Earl Wilson. ~   
  
      
   
          ey -— 
by 2 
& mi)!      
  -. Earn From the Ist 
Add to your savings account or open a new one by 
the 10th of the month and earn our higher-than- 
average dividend from the Ist. 
Pontiac | 
ae Federal Savings HOME OFFICE: 761 W. Huon St. : ROCHESTER: 407 Main St 
DRAYTON PLAINS: PONTIAC: 
4416 Dixie Highway 
  16 E. Lawrence St. 
        
  =.           
   7580 HIGHLAND RD. 
M39 ot WILLIAMS LAKE RD, 
TOWN MARKETS~ OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M. to 1200 BALDWIN AVE. 
a coma 
5PM 
            
    i. 
  
          PRICES EFFECTIVE: MONDAY — TUESDAY — WEDNESDAY, AUGUST. 3 — 4 = 5         
        
  
  
      
    
    
    
  
      
  
     
    
      
      
              - SHELF AFTER SHELF OF TERRIFIC FOOD... .- 
LUE! We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities soo 
None Sold to Declers or Minors       
           
            
           
           
        
   
     
   
       
   
        
       
       
a ee, 5 O GOLD BELL 
Gift Stamps 
     
        
        
     
   
       
              \cing for homes in small towns will; Angell said the new antes (( 
Also headquarters for: ‘be available in August and Sep-|would give Summerfield “unlimit- A 
© Foreign aan — ‘tember under an emergency exten-|ed discretion’ to impound mail. WITH $2.00. P URC HASE /{y Road Guides ision that took effect Saturday. va = \ 
Auto Shipments, Rentals President Eisenhower signed into Argenfines Restrict Red © WITH COUPON ONLY e and law Friday the 60-day extension of] ,. ° * + © Guided and Independent |the voluntary home mortgage Diplomatic Traveling * aes Foreign Tours and.Cruises {| credit program which otherwise | ‘BUENOS AIRES (UPI) — The = |would have expired last midnight. 76 Williams Street | Any housing bill Congress ap-|Atsentine Government ss) 
FE 5-4151 proves this year presumably would|2@mped travel . restrictions on 5 
       
APICNIC TREAT Sell 
PETERS . 
~ > 
+ , ! . 
* 
% 
® 
        
                
      
       
   
     
       
     HORMEL VALUE 
SLICED BACON 
3% LEAN 
PORK: STEAK   
    12-0z. 
Package      
    
   
     
  DOZEN 
CARTON 
           
     
        Current 1 | on LEAt! CUBED Lb. ~ = Ya% Savings e PORK CUTLETS eeoeeeee 89° 
© Fudge Sicles or Pr 49 
SWEET PEAS....... = 10° .DARTMOUTH FROZEN 3" "29°     
      LEMONADE . 
FIG BARS . sali   
      
      ‘ 
  
  
    sh Sa, MRR a 
PP NEE i 
        
        A ‘banquet dinner and installation of officers 
were observed by DAV Auxiliary, Chapter 101, 
Friday evening at Sylvan Glen Country Club. Four 
smiling auxiliary members who attended the affair 
Mrs. Charles Bruno of Detroit, 
left, State Department officer, was a 
special guest at Friday’s DAV Auxil- 
lary banquet. She is pictured with Mrs.   Leslie Cooper, commander, and Mrs. 
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN 
DEAR ABBY: The other day 
I received a postcard from the 
lady who irons for me. She 
said her church was giving a 
stork shower 
for her daugh- 
ter and she 
thought I'd 
like to know 
in case I 
wanted to 
send a pres- 
ent. 
My husband 
is raving . 
mad. He says . 
if I let her ABBY 
“work me” for a present he 
‘will be very disappointed in 
me. 
She irons very well and I’d- 
hate to lose her over a little 
gift I could buy for $3. 
You're a woman, Abby. Is 
my husband right or not? 
NO NAME PLEASE 
DEAR NO: This is a new 
wrinkle! If it gives you the 
feeling of pleasure, generosity 
or security to send a gift, by 
all means, send one. Men don’t 
always understand these 
things. If your husband ever 
tried to iron a shirt he wouldn't 
get so steamed up. 
* * x 
DEAR ABBY: My husband 
is the best man in the world 
when he’s sober — but he 
* hasn't drawn a sober breath 
in two years. He says he'll 
quit drinking when I quit nag- 
ging. 
But the reason I nag him 
is because he drinks. 
Now, Miss Abby, if you will 
figure out a way for him to 
quit drinKing so won quit 
nagging, I will sure thank you. 
. NAGGING 
  DEAR NAGGING: If you 
can’t get your husband to call 
Alcoholics Anonymous (they 
are listed in your telephone 
directory), investigate the 
group called ‘‘AL-ANON.” 
They are the wives, husbands, 
sweethearts and friends of al- 
*coholics who are organized for 
a common purpose. . . to 
learn how to cope with prob- 
lem drinkers and eventually 
lead them back to the road 
of sobriety and self-respect. 
* * x 
DEAR ABBY: [| am in. love 
with a boy the same age as 
I, which is 14; We have been 
going steady for two years. 
~We have it all planned to 
get married when we get out 
of school in four years. He 
kissed.me last Saturday night” 
for the first time. It was just 
a peck on the cheek. Don’t 
you think that after waiting for 
two years I deserved at least 
a kiss on the lips? 
DISAPPOINTED 
You had better slow down, 
Honey! Get the bands off your 
teeth before you start thinking 
about a band on your 
A peck on the cheek is quite 
enough for two fourteen-year- 
olds. 
* * x 
DEAR ABBY: A _ certain 
- married couple who used to 
be in our crowd suddenly gave 
us all the cold shoulder. 
It seems that a rumor got 
started that they were being 
divorced, They denied it and 
tried to find out who started 
the gossip, but so many people 
repeated it that it was impos- 
sible to pin it on anyone. 
Now they refuse to associate 
with any of us. I say if there 
12 Pontiac Area Students 
Get Degrees, Certificates. 
Twelve Pontiac’area students 
at Eastern Michigan Univer- 
sity were awarded degrees and 
certificates at the eighth an- 
“nual Summer Convocation July | 
4 i : 
*. * * 
From Pontiac were..Cheryl 
Dee Bruestle, B.S. Degree; Stu- Others were Virginia I. 
Owens, -M.A. Degree in Educa- 
tion; Dorothy Lee Smith, state 
limited certificate; Fred G. 
Steinbaugh, Bachelor of Music 
Education Degree; Marilyn K. 
Stickle, B. S. eee Gerald 
. Degrees and certifi- 
«cates were Dolores Sally Boya- 
-_ and Wilson Hackett.    
       
  Pontiac Press Photos 
are, from left, Mrs. Frank Lippo, new chaplain; Mrs. 
E. D. Edington, Mrs. Keith Traver, junior vice com- 
mander, and Mrs. John Hutchins, treasurer. 
Don Schumacher, a past commander. 
Mrs. B. S. Sneed Jr., 
new senior vice commander of the 
grganization. not pictured, is 
‘Does Hubby Want Shirts were no truth to the rumor 
they would have Jaughed it off 
in the first place. Or don’t 
you believe, Abby, that ‘‘where 
there’s smoke — there's fire?” 
EX FRIENDS 
DEAR EX: Where there’s 
smoke there is not always 
fire. Could be just someone 
smoking the peace pipe. Those 
who repeat gossip are as 
guilty, in my opinion, as those 
who start it. 
_* * bd 
To get ABBY’s booklet, 
“What Every Teenager Wants 
’ To Know,” send 25 cents and 
2 Bre come. + —    
  US. State 
Federations 
Plan Meet 
More than 500 women, rep-— 
resenting the executive board 
of National Federation of Mu- 
sic Clubs, Michigan Federa- 
tion of Music Clubs and Mich- 
igan Federation of Women’s 
Clubs will, attend meetings of 
heir respective organizations 
at National Music Camp, In- 
terlochen this week. 
An honors convocation will 
be held Sunday morning. At 
this time the NFMC and the 
National Music Camp will pre- 
- sent joint citations to Dr. How- 
ard Hanson, composer and 
Dr. Alexander Ruthven, for- 
mer president of University of 
Michigan for their contribu- 
tions to music and music ed- 
ucation in this country. 
Also to receive recognition 
are six state federations, Mich- 
igan, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, 
Wisconsin and Texas which 
have endowed scholarship 
lodges at the music camp. 
. Shower Honors 
Future Bride 
Bride-elect Joann Hayworth 
was honored at a miscellaneous 
shower recently at the North 
Johnson avenue home of Mrs. 
Arthur Kariean, Mrs, Wilbur 
Carrier Jr. was cohostess. 
Miss Hayworth, the daugh- 
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Delvin 
Hayworth of Royal Oak will 
marry Charles Seidel, son of 
Mr, and Mrs. Allen Seidel of 
Royal Oak Aug. 29. 
lroned ? 
a large, self-addressed, 
stamped envelope to ABBY in 
care of this newspaper. 
For a personal reply, write 
to ABBY jin care of this paper. 
Enclose a self-addressed, 
stamped envelope. 
Order in Jewel Box 
Is your jewelry box a tangle 
of necklaces, pins and brace- 
lets? It shouldn’t be. Aside 
from the. danger of breaking 
clasps, the pieces will scratch 
one. another, dimming stones 
and metal. 
Pe ae 
a ee 
City Commissioner and Mrs. Floyd P. Miles of 
West Columbia‘avenue were honored by members 
of the Commission Sunday in celebration of their 
twenty-fifth wedding anniversary. Married July 29, 
1934 at First Baptist Church tohere they met, they 
have one fo Floyd Jr., at home. President and gen- 
a * f eZ » B Wedding Bells Ring 
Rites in Evening Unite 
Pair. at Lutheran Church Robbie Groce 
dicean' $50 gisents Wine pesote 
at the Saturday evening wed- 
ding of Barbara D. yee and 
J. Mahder of St. aul cee 
eran Church officiated before 
an altar banked with bouquets 
of white gladioli. 
* * * 
Parents of the couple are 
Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Sahr 
of Cameron avenue and Mr. 
and Mrs. Weldon Huffman of 
North Anderson street. 
The bride wore a floor-length 
gown of nylon organza fash- 
ioned with a skirt that fea- 
tured flying panels appliqued 
She wore pearl earrings and 
a gold cross and held a bou- 
quet of white feathered carna- 
tions, pale yellow roses and 
stephanotis. A crown head- 
piece of pearls and sequins 
held her illusion veil. 
* * * 
Patricia Sahr, sister of the 
bride, was maid of honor. 
Bridesmaids were Mrs. James 
Hudson, the bridegroom's cous- 
in, and Helga Falk. The honor 
maid wore a pale blue street- 
length dress of taffeta with a 
matching headpiece and véil. 
The bridesmaids wore iden- 
tically styled gowns in pale 
pink, Alt three attendants car- 
ried bouquets of carnations 
matching their dresses, 
Edwin Scott of Flint, a cous- 
in of the bridegroom, was best 
man. Ushers were John Pat- 
terson and Donald Younker. 
bd * * 
Mrs, Sahr wore a French 
blue silk dress with white ac- 
cessories and a corsage of pink 
roses and carnations. A light 
beige dress with persimmon , 
accessories and a beige and 
persimmon cymbidium orchid 
corsage was the choice of Mrs. 
Huffman. 
Guests were received at 
UAW-CIO Hall on East Ken- 
nett road following the cere- 
mony. 
The bride's going-away cos- 
tume was a white sheath dress 
with white accessories. She 
wore a corsage from her bridal 
bouquet, 
The couple is_ traveling 
through Arkansas and Texas 
and will reside on North An- 
derson street upon their re- 
turn. 
Guests Honor 
Kay Brantley 
at Shower 
Kay Brantley, bride-elect of 
Jack Pieron, was honored at 
a personal shower given at 
the Chicago avenue.home of 
Joan Bee last Thursday. Mary 
Currah was cohostess. 
Guests attending the shower 
were Joan Turner, Sharon 
Nichols, Gail Marien, Bonnie 
Vallad, Sharon Stone, Pat 
Wampler, Mrs. Robert Kelly, 
Mrs, William Brantley and 
Mrs. Allan Campbell. 
The marriage will take place 
at Baldwin Avenue Methodist 
_Church Aug. 22. Parents of the 
engaged couple are the Ernest 
Brantleys of Brooklyn avenue 
and the John Pierons of West 
Cornell avenue. 
Ries 
  MRS, LARRY SCOTT 
Meets at Lake 
Mrs. Robert B. Oliver was 
hostess to the July-August 
group of the First Presbyterian 
Church Friday at her sum- 
mer home at Elizabeth Lake. 
Twenty-six members and 
guests enjoyed a cooperative 
dinner and celebrated Mrs. 
Harry Windiate’s birthday. 
Guests included Mrs. Jack 
Patterson, Mrs. Russell Bas- 
sett and Judith Bassett: Pullerd were 
  ay 
a J 
Bennett and 
W illiam E. 
married 
Saturday 
evening at 
Church of 
God. Parents 
of the couple 
are Mr. and 
Mrs. Willie P.. 
Bennett and 
Mr. and Mrs. 
Charles C. 
Bullard. 
  oats 
MRS. WILLIAM E. BULLARD 
Couple Married Here 
Under Flowered Trellis 
Robbie Grace Bennett and 
William Eugene Bullard were 
married Saturday evening 
before an altar banked with 
white gladioli and candelabra 
Married in 
Birmingham 
Saturday 
afternoon © 
were Janet 
Hudson and 
James Faxon. 
Parents of 
the couple are 
Mr. and Mrs. 
Frank W. 
Hudson and 
_ Mr. and Mrs. 
: Russell 
Faxon. 
MRS. JAMES FAXON 
Vows Said Before 300 
in St. James Church 
St. James Church in Bir- 
mingham was the scene of the 
Saturday afternoon wedding of 
Janet Hudson and James Fax- 
on, The Rev. W. E. Snoxell 
. officiated at.the ceremony be- 
fore 300 guests. 
Parents of the couple are 
Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Hudson 
of West Walton boulevard and 
Pontiac Press Photo 
eral manager of Christian Literature Sales here, Mr. 
Miles is active in First Baptist Church, The Gideons, 
Christian Men’s Club, and the YMCA. Congratulat- 
ing the couple are, from left, Commissioner Wesley J. 
W ood and Mayor Philip E. Rowston. 
t Mr. and Mrs. Russell Faxon 
of Dover road. 
The bride wore a nylon chif- 
fon gown with a _ neckline 
trimmed with Alencon lace. 
The bouffant, floor-length skirt 
ended in a chapel sweep and 
the skirt was accented with 
appliques of Alencon’ lace. An 
Alencon lace cap held her 
fingertip veil of pure silk illu- 
sion and she carried a bouquet 
of phalaenopsis, stephanotis 
and ivy. 
Mrs. Thomas Berry of Royal 
Oak was matron of honor. 
Bridesmaids’ were Patricia 
French of South Haven, Sarah 
Faxon, the bridegroom's sis- 
ter and. Mrs, Norbert Capis- 
trant. -They wore identical 
dresses of white embroidered 
English organdy with ballerina 
length skirts, scoop necklines 
and taffeta cummerbunds with 
white picture hats. 
‘ * * * 
‘ Mrs. Berry's bouquet was of 
' Shaded blue delphiniums with 
miniature* pink roses. The 
bridesmaids carried bouquets 
of shaded blue delphiniums. 
Flower girl Sally Phillips 
wore a white organdy dress 
and she carried a cascade bou- 
quet of shaded blue delphin- 
iums with miniature pink 
roses. Her headpiece was a 
crown of miniature roses. 
John Woodman was best 
man, Ushers were Darell 
Adams, Kenneth Weed, Rich- 
ard: Wagner, Richard McKib- 
ben of Ohio, and Peter Faxon 
of California. 
Following a reception in the 
church parlors, the couple left 
for € honeymoon trip to North- 
ern Michigan and Canada. 
The bride wore a black and 
white eyelet going away dress 
with white accessoriés, 
will live on Seminole avenue, 
The bride attends Eastefn 
Michigan University and the 
bridegroom is attending Gen- 
eral Motors Institute. 
Mrs. Hudson wore a dress of 
white organdy over green 
feta with green and pink ac- 
cessories and a pink rose cor- 
sage for her daughter's wed- 
ding. Mrs. Faxon was dressed 
in a gray chiffon dress with 
white accessories and a cor- 
sage of miniature pink, roses. - .at the Church of God on East 
Pike street. The bride's broth- 
er, the Rev. Billy P. Ben- 
nett, officiated standing under 
an arched trellis trimmed with 
huckleberries and gladioli. He 
is pastor at the Dearborn 
Church of God. 
The former Miss Bennett is 
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
Willie P. Bennett of Crescent 
Lake road. Mr. and Mfs. 
Charles C. Bullard of LaSalle 
are the bridegroom’s parents. 
* * * 
The bride's floor-length gown. 
was fashioned of tiered embroi- 
dered silk organza over tulle 
and taffeta and featured short 
sleeves and a Sabrina neck- 
line. She wore matching gaunt- 
lets and a crown headpiece 
with sequins which held a fin- “ 
gertip veil of silk illusion. Her,’ 
flowers were white calla lilies 
in’ an arm bouquet. 
WORE AQUA CROWN 
Peggy Bennett attended her 
sister as maid of “honor, 
gowned in a floor-length dress 
of aqua nylon over ‘taffeta in 
princess styling. She wore an 
aqua crown headpiece with se- 
quins, matching gauntiets, and 
held a heart-shaped cascade 
arrangement ‘of white and aqua 
carnations. 
Bridesmaid Joan Ford of De- 
troit, junior bridesmaid J 
Bennett, ‘sister of the bride, 
and flower eet Colleen Bul-. 
lard of sister of the 
bridegroom, wore gowns iden- 
tical’ to the honor maid's. * . 
The junior bridesmaid and 
flower girl wore headbands of 
aqua carnation petals. Miss 
‘Bennett and Miss Ford car- 
“ried cascades of aqua carna- 
tions, and flower girl, Colleen, 
carried a basket of aqua and 
white carnation petals. 
Delbert Rose of Monroe was 
best. man. Ushering were 
Ronald Bullard, -the bride- 
groom’s brother of LaSalle, 
Phil Templeton, Bernard King 
of Commerce, and Harry Ben/ 
nett, brother of the bride. 
Ricky Gillon of Plymouth was 
ring bearer. . 
* * * 
Mrs. Bennett wore a pink 
lace sheath with white acces- 
sories and a corsage of Carol 
Amyling rosebuds for the wed- 
~ ding. Pale blue lace with navy 
accessories and a _ corsage 
identical to that of Mrs. Ben- 
nett’s was the choice of Mrs. 
Bullard. : 
The. 300 guests attending 
were received at the Roosevelt 
Temple after the ceremony. 
The new Mrs. Bullard was 
wearing a pink silk sheath suit 
with white accessories when 
the couple left for a trip. to 
Florida: and Havana. 
They will reside in Dearborn 
where Mr. Bullard, a Western 
Michigan University gradu- 
ate, teaches at ——s High 
School. 
Dinner Honors. 
Her Retirement 
Mrs. James Bowden of 
Franklin, who is retiring from 
Pontiaé Motor Division aftey 25 
years, was honored with a re- 
tirement dinner Saturday ° at 
Devon Gables. 
Florence Landry gave the in- 
vocation and Enoch Ely served 
as master of ceremonies. 
Guest speaker was“ Howard 
Powers and Albert Kray made 
the gift presentation. 
Florence Johnson, who was 
in charge of reservations, 
greeted some 115 guests, 
Play Bridge 
Bonneville. Bridge Club met 
Saturday evening with eight 
tables in play. Winners wére 
Mr. and Mrs, Ernest Clintdn; 
Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Thomip- 
son; Mrs. Norma Keller and 
Mary Malchie, and Mr. and 
Mrs, Harold Sandelmont, #    
       
Fak Aaa TAG NE      
  
   __ SIXTEEN / 
oe ? 
a 
y THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 3: 1959 :   
      — 
Getting a man to work in the 
WILLIAMK. COWIE Shaprect: anibition, drive,| 4 : iby re 
- Custom Upholstery 
§ Yrs, of Practical Experience 
Voorheis Rid. FE 4-2857 
Between Telegraph & Orchard Lake energy—and a pretty neighbor sun- | 
bathing next door ,. . When people 
italk about the good old days, you 
jean be sure they mean the days 
  old.—Earl] Wilson.     
    2435 Dinte Hwy 
The Cry that PONTIAC DRIVE-IN THEATER 
FE 5-4500 
ocked THE VALLEY OF THE SUN... 
“THis EARTH 1s MINE! CinemaScope . TECHNICOLOR 
    when they were neither good nor! 
  
        Mr.-and Mrs. E. M. Buckley of 
Orchard Lake (left) are shown de- 
parting from the Grand Hotel in a 
horse’ drawn carriage for a_ scenic 
| tour of Mackinac Is land. While vaca- é 
tioning there, the Buckleys enjoyed 
bicycling, and golfing among other 
activities. Pictured with them are Mr. 
and Mrs. Martin Winston of. Indian- 
apolis, Ind.   
  —— 
  i i ] E 3 
Ms. nh aE A 
M8 cei, 
} 
=, another 
WIGGS ° 
SUMMER 
SALE 
feature! 
     
  ‘Now you can have the exclusive, 
custom-made upholstered pieces you've 
always wanted—built to your exact 
specifications as to style, size and color—and 
at prices far less than you would normally 
expect to pay! True, this is not low- 
priced furniture—but it IS the very finest 
value obtainable for the money. 
These pieces are available in the popular new 
quilted covers, as well as in a wide 
selection of other fine fabrics. 
bases are optional, too. 
And the entire construction, from the bare 
frame to the last stitch, is an outstanding 
combination of superior workmanship 
and top quality materials. 
Come in soon and see our display of this 
distinctive line of fine custom-made furniture. 
Then order the pieces you want—ot —  m 
our very special Summer Sale prices! 
  Skirted 
USE WIGGS’ DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN, 
90-DAY ACCOUNT or REGULAR CHARGE 
    
       
    
ON SAV   
      
CUSTOM-MADE SOFAS & CHAIRS 
Furniture of exceptional quality, built by skilled master craftsmen... 
with every custom detail reflecting the superior values offered during ®» 
Wiggs’ Summer Sale! 
* CHOOSE THE STYLE YOU WANT—to complement either 
traditional or contemporary decor. 
* CHOOSE THE SIZE YOU WANT—1ailored to fit your floor 
plan and wall area. 
* CHOOSE THE COLOR AND FABRIC YOU WANT—to blend 
perfectly-with your color scheme. 
A Loose pillow, 3-cushion, skirted base ' Cc 
sofa. 892" long. Priced from. .$314.20 
Same sofa in 592” love-seat size. 
Priced from.......,.8..000. $243.00 
Same sofa in 107” king-size~ 
Priced from .......... se eeee $346.70 2 
B Curved, button-back, 2-cushion sofa. F 
86” long. Priced from ........ $260.00 
W1G   Tufted back, T-cushion lounge chair, 
Priced from 35.00 Ce ee ce er) 
Tufted back, curved orm, skirted base 
lounge chair, Priced from ..... - 
Curved, buttor.-back sofa, skirted base. 
Choice of many beautiful covers. 
Priced -ffFOM) cc cs eek sae wines 
Swivel-base lounge choir, curved button- 
back, T-cushion, Priced from. ..$107.75 
Gs 24 WEST HURON STREET 
Open Monday and Friday Evenings Until 9 P. M. OK to Let 
Friends Pay e 
Thei rShare 
~ By EMILY POST ‘| 
“Dear Mrs. Post: This past 
spring my husband and I 
bought. a summer cottage: I 
have been. spending the sum- 
mer here with my . daughter 
and my husband comes up on 
weekends. Quite a few of our 
friends have hinted that they 
would like to come and spend 
some time with us. 
* * * ° 
‘‘We would love to have them 
if it were,pot for the extra cost 
their visits Would entail which, 
frankly, we cannot afford. 
Could we possibly suggest to 
them that they will be welcome 
to come if they are willing to 
share the food expenses?” 
  Answer: I think that if you 
quite frankly explain the Situa- 
tion to your friends they will 
understand, qnd gladly share 
2s expenses. 
  
“Dear Mrs. Post: My fiance 
talks about having four friends 
as ushers whereas I expect to 
have only two bridesmaids. 
Will this be proper or will I 
have to ask two additional 
friends so that the number is 
even? Or if I have only two 
and he does have four, should 
two of the men simply usher 
and not walk. in the proces- 
sion?”         
Answer: It is not at all neces- 
sary that the number of brides- 
maids and ushers be even, and 
it will be entirely proper for 
you to have two bridesmaids 
and the groom four ushers. 
They all walk in the procession 
regardless of number. 
  
‘Dear Mrs. Post: Two weeks 
from this coming Sunday my 
graduation class will be having 
its tenth reunion. One of the 
alumni has a _ beautiful big 
house with lots of ground 
around it and the reunion will 
be held at her house. I under- 
‘stand it is to be a picnic. I 
would like to know if it would 
be proper for me to wear 
slacks, or should a dress be 
worn? 
  Answer: You should wear a 
dress, unless you are told that 
slacks may be worn. 
(Copyright 1959)     
Honor Area Miss 
With a Shower 
Friday Evening 
| Mary Moore, daughter of 
| the Charles, Moores of Sheridan 
avenue was honored at a 
kitchen shower Friday evening 
at the Gage street home of 
Mrs. Charles Moore Jr. Mrs. 
LeRoy Boelter was cohostess. 
Miss Moore will exchange 
vows with Stuart Choate, son 
of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Choate 
of James street Aug. 22 at. 
  Central Methodist Church. 
* * * 
Guests at the Shower were 
Mrs. Michael Baldoni andher 
daughter Ralene of Center 
Line, Florence Hogan of Ann 
Arbor, Mrs. Jack McKenna, 
Lois Kidd, Sonia Boose, Mrs. 
Betty Coons, Mrs. John Ferrett 
and Mrs. Delmonto Man- 
ganello. 
* * * 
Others were Mrs. . Douglas 
Judy, Mrs. Darrell Judy, Mrs. 
Raymond Oliver, Mrs. Chaate, 
Mrs. Moore and Cheryl Ann 
Moore. 
+   Look! A whirl of easy-sew pleats 
adds gay motion to this smart 
back-to-school fashion. Hip-band- 
ing creates a two-piece look. 
Choose crisp cotton — plain, plaid, 
or bright checks. Tomorrow's pat- 
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Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8. Size 6 takes 1% yards 39-inch fabric. 
tern part. Easier, accurate. 
Send 35 cents in coins for each 
pattern for lst-class mailing. Send 
to Anne Adams, care of The Pon- 
tiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 
West 17th St., New York 11, N. Y. 
Print plainly name, address with 
zone, size and style number. A | Call Careful Dan at 
Printed Pattern 4594: Children’s | 
Printed directions oi each pat-   
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  6 . , eee : e , 
Latent Me bo Ga) gt ges __THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, ‘AUGUST 8, 1939 — ‘ __ SEVENTEEN - 
‘i 22 aL r’ ° ~ i . 9 : A _ . * 3 zt ; we = + : 
PRESEASON | Area Couple Married  (PoCwthesR | | The “Different” Look © _~ Se 
so 3 | e ° 4 : _. for you e'o~ 3 . . 
specu, | in Waterford Church /Trim Figure Now for. Fall] penmanevrs i 4 _ Stephen, Jencks exchanged red ‘ : } nme a ° r 
a By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN = ;I weigh 130 pounds, Any..woman)10 cents and a stamped, self-ad-}  . $5 —$6 —$7.50 . . 3 
0 The Rev. Robert -D.” Wine Are you going to be able to get|ca” lose weight if she just: makes| dressed envelope with your request crea SY officiated at the double-ring into the clothes you wore last fall, |W ber mind to do it for the Marathon booklet to Jose-|| Styled Hair Cutting ¢y agp . 
OFF ceremony or have you gained a few pounds) Another letter: “Just,a note t0| chine Lowman in care of The from..........-- ie ° . 
Parade since then? If you suspect that the|tell you that I started your Mara-| 9 pies 7 - 
ont a oe |seams will have to stretch, orjthon. four weeks ago. I weighed - «. « . , - ON.ALL HEAVY r. . Ellis Studebaker worse, that you will have to have|201 pounds when I began dieting. oo ANNALIESE BEAUT ¥Y SALON > 
of Waterford and. Mr. and your ‘clothes altered, or even|I already kave lost 15 pounds and| Tomorrow: “Marathon Made ; 
Mrs. Joseph Jencks of Orton- worse, that it,will not be any fun|am not only delighted at the loss|Her Look and Feel 20 Years| (Over Tasty Bahery) - : 
WIN ER ville. to buy new clothes, you have eight|of weight but also because it is 80| Younger.” 801, N. Saginaw St. 7 FE 2-5600 . 
The bride’s full-length gown weeks in which to do something/easy to diet the Marathon way. : . 
of nylon organdy over taf- about it before really zippy weath- 4] had always been hungry Easy Cleaning rd 
feta was fashioned yw her 
mother and featured “a lace 
bodice with long sleeves and 
@ round neckline. Her finger- 
. tip veil of silk illusion was 
held by a seed pearl crown 
and she carried a cascade 
bouquet of white roses, chrys- CP Sreives. ‘| on other diets because they de- 
The following is a letter from) pied me substantial meals but one of the winners of my 8-Week! yith your calorie counting plan 
Self-Improvement Marathon which’ | can still enjoy good meals.” 
runs every’ JAcmary, _ | This letter teils you of the actual “Dear Mrs. Lowman: A short oxnerience of a woman who dieted 
time ago I wrote for your 8-Week | successfully and without unpleas- CLOTHES BEAT THE RUSH 
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clean button boxes, dresser 
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out disturbing the articles in-       
    
  
  MRS. STEPHEN JENCKS — 
A reception was held in the 
church parlors. Before leav- “I stuck to 1,200 calories a day|count to 1,200 a day is most ef- 
and lost about two pounds a week.|fective. You lose steadily and can 
I have tried many other programs still eat well. 
with no success but Marathon did} If you did not join my 8-Week 
it. Thanks to you and my self-|Self - Improvement Marathon last 
control and willpower I now weigh| January and would like. to have 
138 pounds. I plan on losing until'the routine this woman used, send | mint green taffeta with a 
chiffon overskirt and match- 
ing hat and veil. 
Judy Sweet of Elyria, Ohio, 
and Ruck Rock of Millington 
were bridesmaids. They wore 
similar gowns of yellow ‘and 
lavender. Linda Tower and 
Caryn Sue Everly were flower 
girls and wore identical dress- 
“es of lavender and yellow. All 
the attendants carried baskets 
of summer flowers. Marathon. As soon as your book- ; : o lose side. SEGRE ELEY LEE IE LE MIE. Aaa aL > 
anthem feathered antness, If you are going t 
e OVERCOATS ee and eathe let came I started ae = only a few pounds, short, carefully s 
@ JACKETS Virginia Studebaker was her Slay om only, aes ek Biaposd sa Res 5, a ' 
' sister’s maid of honor. Her are § . large 
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Mrs. Studebaker wore a 
sheath dress of dark beige 
lace over taffeta with match- 
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  William Jencks, the bride- of Talisman roses. Mrs. Jencks 
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    New 
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by Rowena Wilson 
With the rediscovery of femi- 
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hair styles are back in the 
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4 One can even see 
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in many of the 
ee softer arrange-    
     
  ’ By RUTH MILLETT 
entering college this fall: «Memo to young men who are! the girl you want to marry to 
Recently I've had the opportu- 
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If it’s you she: wants and not CLEANED 
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Since 1929    HOOVER -   
  
  
         
      
  
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Beauty Salon, 4631 Dixie High- weet even if she puts you through} 21 Water St. FE 4-3777 || be smart-iook smart way ra - - an 
14'S. Main, Clarkston, MA 5. |/her own education, it is going to 
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So if you're smart, you'll hang 
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MEET for LUNCH RIKER FOUNTAIN Sealtest Ice Cream 
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‘ 
   
  
  ‘EIGHTEEN | z | ti. TITF PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1959 SJ 
: ; ¢ : ; , & 
  
      Ee 
a 
ee 
  att 
          
  . END YOUR DAY WITH-A SHORT STRETCH 
A little mental exercise is the perfect way~to relax after a busy 
day on the job. A- short stretch to that friendly orange box will 
bring you all the equipment you need for this athletic program. 
oo The news'of the world is in there and it needs your attention. | : 
News about the foreign ministers, the local politicians, the Tigers, 
, about big business and small business, news about people you 
know. Sit down and wrestle with it. Just the thing to keep in. 
shape. The right kind of program for your ‘relaxing pleasure pre- ss 
pared especially for you by The Pontiac Press. FE 2-8181. ! | | oe ’ 
4 , i 2 
   _THE PONTIAC PRESS,   
MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1959 ° : ie PONTIAC, MICHIGAN i 
  
  Ps ' 
a. 
  e 
«4 
(This is the seeond of a series of 
articles dealing with fast growing 
sports and how a person feels ex- 
eriencing them for the first time. 
st week, Judo expert Hiroshi 
Orit! bounced around Bruno Kearns, 
sports editor of The Press. Today 
earns’ adventure goes to Orchard 
Lake where he put on the aqua 
lung and went skin diving for the 
first time with Leon Johnston, Pon- 
tiac sig diving expert doing the 
tutorin z 
1 “Checking All Skin. ‘Diving Gear 
By BRUNO L. KEARNS 
Sports Editor, Pontiac Press 
For the second time in my 
life, a storybook belief has 
been shattered. 
It was a great shock many 
years ago toe learn that Santa 
2. Getting Instructions 
    Clause was just a myth. (I . 
never did forgive my fat 
uncle for letting me puil off 
his phony white beard ‘only 
to find it wasn’t St. Nick be- 
hind it). 
Now I will probably carry a 
personal grudge against skin 
divers. I just found a few days 
ago that there are no such 
creatures as mermaids. 
* x * 
For three hours I searched 
the watery empire of Orchard 
Lake and the closest thing to a 
mermaid was that little fresh 
female perc h— named Mimi 
who followed’ me around with 
a flirting eye: 
(She probably thought I 
was an oversized mackeral 
and was trying to invite 
me home to see her mother 
and father). 
I tried to scare Mimi off by 
flappimg the fins on my feet at 
her. This must have some sig- 
nificance in fish sign language 
because she flipped her tail at 
me and threw a few bubbles 
at my mask. 
* * * 
No use fighting it I thought 
so I proceeded on with my first 
journey in a new watery world 
with that she-fish tailing right 
beside me. 
It was not until after a pre- 
liminary orientation given by © 
Pontiac skin diver Leon 
Johnston that I finally took 
my aqua-lung journey. 
“Skin diving can be danger- 
ous, and all prospective divers 
should take instructions on 
proper methods and safety pre- 
8. Taking a Trial Run   
cautions before going down,” 
said Johnston. 
* * * 
There is a certain amount of 
shock that accompanies the 
first umderwater breath 
through the aqua lung hose. 
This is experienced in shallow 
water by putting the head 
underwater and breathing nor- 
mally until adjustment is made 
to this new’ sensation. 
One warning to the absent 
minded, don’t forget to put 
on the face mask before go- 
ing under. I put the mouth- 
piece of the: aqua lung into 
my mouth but left the mask 
on my forehead. My head 
came out of the water in a 
hurry after I tried to sip a 
few gallons of Orchard Lake 
through my nose. 
There are four types of suits 
for skin divers. The wet suit, 
the dry suit, the swim suit and 
the birthday suit. (The latter is 
not recommended by the law). 
* * * 
Leon wore the wet suit, made 
of neoprene rubber which 
serves as insulation to keep the 
cold water away from the, 
body. It is porous but the body 
warms the water in the suit. 
The dry suit can be worn 
over clothing and diver can 
stay completely dry. 
My choice as a novice was 
my own bathing suit, but 
later when we moved into 
deeper water which got cold- 
er I realized the need for 
the neoprene outfit. 
It was a new and wierd sen- 
_Sation breaking through the 
weeds at the bottom of the 
lake. My deepest dive as a be- 
ginner was about 12 feet, but 
the feeling of confidence 
stayed with me knowing that 
Johnston was right next to 
me. : 
x *& * 
What would -be my _ first 
souvenir in my treasure hunt 
under Orchard Lake, | won- 
dered? ° 
No sooner I asked myself 
that question, I found it. It 
It was a brown receptacle 
from a premium brewery. 
Oh well, at least I learsed 
what kind of beer the fish 
drink, 
As we moved along the bot- 
tom, another wierd appear- 
ance in looking back was to 
see the formation of the weeds 
after going through them. Just 
as we moved them, that’s the 
_way they stayed. 
* * * 
All the wiggly little creatures 
- came by to welcome our visit 
to their homeland. A_ snail 
waved to little Mimi who was 
still tagging along taking in the 
sights. . 
Later, Leon and I decided 
to go diving the mechanical 
way. (Those who want to 
admit it call it the lazy meth- 
od of skin diving.) 
I took hold of the porta-sub 
and made like a submarine, It®* 
towed me around at about 4 
4. Look at Me, I'm a Submarine 
    
& {) 
m.p.h. Leon hooked a_ post 
power-pack to his aqua lung 
tank and away we zoomed, (At 
this point k lost my little 
friend Mimi. Guess she didn't 
like the idea of my going jet 
propelled). 
a a 
During the tour, we held on 
to a white piece of cord. The 
cord .was attached to small 
rubber raft which we pulled 
~along the water's surface. 
i, On the raft there was a red 
and white flag which served to 
indicate to any boaters in the 
area that a skin diver was be- 
‘tow. When such a flag is seen 
on the water, the boat driver 
should keep at least 90 feet 
from the point for the safety 
of the diver below. 
“It is a courtesy, which all 
boaters should know,’’ said 
Johnston. 
In the rise to the surface, 
I remembered the warning 
given me that I should con- 
tinue to breath normally and 
not hold. my breath. 
Holding the breath oo rapid NINETEEN 
i   
  
Like most sports, there are ~ 
basic fundamentals and safety 
precautions which should be 
adhered to in skin diving, Make 
the sport more interesting by 
forming good safety habits. 
1. Never go diving immedi- 
ately following an illness with- 
out checking with physician. 
And never dive with a cold or. 
sinus condition because mu- 
cous clogging cannot equalize 
pressure and could rupture the 
eardrums because of obstruc- 
tion. 
2. Expose your body grad- 
ually rather than a sudden 
immersion into cold water. 
When diving in any cold 
water without protective suit 
the diver should watch for 
effects of exposure. 
3. Before diving all equip- 
ment should be checked, Nev-: 
er use damaged equipment. | 
4. Don't try to go deep when 
not accustomed to the pres- 
sure change. The diver’s limit 
may be determined by pain 
in the ears or sinus tract. 
5. Do not use ear plugs 
for skin diving because an 
air pocket is formed between 
the eardrum and the plug. 
Pressure can also drive the 
plug deep into the ear. 
Diving Fun—But No Mermaids rise to the surface could re- 
sult in air embolism which is 
when an excess of air pressure 
within the lungs overexpands 
the Jungs and ruptures the air 
sacs and blood vessels. 
This is prevented by inhaling 
and exhaling normally. 
Just like any guy who hates 
to admit he will never see 30 
again, no such venture into a 
new sport world could take 
place without a few aches and 
pains. No sooner we got back 
onto the dock, the calves of 
both legs cramped. Thanks to 
Ron Newman, the lifeguard at 
Orchard Lake: Country Club, I 
walked away with straight legs 
after he rubbed out the 
cramps. , 
Cramps or no cramps, it was 
a great adventure. 
And please, as a personal 
favor, if any of you fishermen 
should hook into my little 
friend Mimi, throw her back 
in. She’s a true friend of ‘‘us’’ 
skin divers. 
(Next part of the series— 
water @kiiing). 
  
Much to Learn   
Skin Diving Know-How 
1. There is a lot of equipment that goes into 
skin diving and it should be thoroughly checked 
béfore using it in the water. Pontiac expert skin 
diver Leon Johnston is seen in photo No. 1 showing 
Kearns the large assembly of underwater devices 
he has. 
x * * 
2. Before attempting to skin dive, Kearns 
gets the proper instructions on how to use the 
aqua lung, the face mask and the breathing 
lines. 
=x x x 
3. Before | going into deep waters, beginning skin 
divers must try their equipment and their breath- 
ing methods in shallow waters. New devices such as 
the power-pak, which is attached to the aqua lung 
tank, or the porta-sub, which the diver holds, en- 
ables the diver to triple his air time by less exer- 
tion. They. also gine fatigue. 
4. The Eeweipek cruises Y ie diver through 
the water at three to five miles per hour, and 
even faster for lighter people. A slight effort- 
less use of the fins will more than double the 
diver’s speed with the power-pak or porta-sub. 
xk * * 
5. After a period of orientation on the use of 
the aqua lung and underwater safety, Kearns puts 
on a full skin diving outfit which includes the neo- 
warm under water. 
6. One of the 
things which can 
be dangerous for 
the diver is the 
boat driver on the 
water. Kearns ex- 
* plains to a pair of. 
boaters, Sue Leahy 
(right) and Sue 
Sawyer, that when 
the red and white 
flag is seen on a 
small rubber raft 
or buoy, they. 
should keep at least 
90 feet away. 
7. It was a thrilling 
experience for the first 
time, but like all things 
they must come to an 
end. It was a painful 
experience after leav- 
ing the water following 
three hours of skin div- 
ing. Both legs cramped 
at the calves ‘and so 
“ that Kearns could get 
back to his loyal type- 
writer without crutch- 
es, life guard Ron 
Newman rubs out the 
cramps and sends 
Kearns on his way to 
‘plan his next venture 
—water skiing. 
  ' prene wet suit which keeps the body comfortably 
7. End the Day With Cramps In Diving, a All Safety Rules 6. Never go skin diving 
alone. 
7. Never hold your breath. 
Breathe normally during as- 
cent and come up slowly. 
Breaking this rule may result 
‘in air embolism. 
8. Be careful in using a 
hood with a dry suit. It can 
be used with a wet suit be 
cause the wet suit fits the 
body snugly and does not en- 
trap air between body and 
suit. 
9. Always use swimming 
fins because locomotion de- 
pends on the flutter kick leav- 
ing the arms free for other 
purposes, 
10, Never leave the regu- 
lator on the cylinder when 
the aqua lung is not in use. 
11. If far away from babe 
and out of air, swim on your 
back to prevent weight of tank 
from tiring you. 
12. It is advisable when 
diving to have a small rub- 
ber tube float with the skin 
diver's flag attached. The 
float can serve to rest the 
diver in deep water, and the 
0. Now the | flag serves to tell boaters in 
the vicinity that there is a 
diver below. A piece of cord 
attached from the rubber ® 
float to the wrist of the diver 
is all that is necessary to 
pull the float along the sur- 
face. BOATERS SHOULD 
RESPECT THE SKIN DIV- 
ERS FLAG BY STAYING 
AT LEAST 99 FEET FROM 
THE FLOAT, 
Skin Diver Since 1950 
Expert Leon Johnston 
Leon Johnston of Pontiae 
is our skin diving expert in 
this article, 
Leon has been skin diving 
since 1950. He has held 
instructional classes at the 
YMCA and started many new 
skin divers in the sport. 
He has all the modern 
equipment used in skin div- 
ing including many feature 
items such as the post power- 
pak and the Porta-sub for 
more underwater fun. 
Real McCoy, 
  
  
  a ie dag i pn capkonint gn   
   
  2 er te ee 
  ‘Twenty a 
e 
  
New Champion 
Fires Hot 66 
for Pro Title Pudgy Bob Shoots 30 
on Front Nine With 
Five Birdies 
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI)—Bob Ros- 
  burg, the new P.G.A. champion 
who finally won ‘“‘the big one I've! 
been looking for,’ wasn't sure to-! 
day whether his triumph came on! 
merit or “‘little Jerry’s mistakes.’’| 
Little Jerry is the 43-year-old, 
five-fpot, five-inch, 138-pound Jerry: 
Barber, who blew the P.G.A. cham. | 
pionship yesterday when he bo-; 
geyed the last two holes. 
“I gave the tournament away,” 
Barber said, ‘‘when I put my 
But he didn't take anything away 
from the bespectacled Rosburg, 
who with three children, ages eight, 
seven and six, wanted to win ‘‘a attention of Bob Rosburg Jr., on 
Professional Golf Championship 
  big one’’ in the hope he will get 
a good job with a golf club so he| 
will be able to spend nore time   a 
AP Wirephete 
JUNIOR STEALS THE SHOW — - Something has attracted the 
the huge cup emblematic of the 
which was won by his dad in 
Minneapolis yesterday. Rosburg shot a final round 66 and finished 
with a 277 total to edge Jerry Barber by one stroke. 
  
PGA Tourn 
  Rosburg, who has been making | 
his living playing golf since he LIS (AP)—Final scores and turned in 1953, was ee in the National PGA 
red ia going veterk a: amg Cat 71-72-68-66—277 
nal round, logget four ee ven ber, 382 . endincens 
par 66 gave him a 72-hole total PS oni Beach” Pia”. 12-46-68-72—278 of 277, one stroke better than , Ld pepebab ea _—_ _71-400-71-70—a00 
Barber and Doug Sanders. Sand- Ken Venturi. $2.00 a ’ 
ers, one stfoke behind Barber |... AE Ae ee eee ee 
going into the final round, card- Ona aa Pas .. 72-68-72-68—28) 
= e Bouch: A ! 
second place th | sam Sneed we el el 
Cary M . $1,600 Defending champion Dow Fin-|~ | Calif. THOTT 
sterwald was fourth a>. He ae 2 alee, CRM xcs 69-70-72-73—284) a fourth round par 70. Tied Oliver. $1,250 7-70-469-71—285, 
fifth at 281 were the favored Mike! poug Ford. 81.250 696° 
Souchak, whose putter failed him| ,.,CrYssl River, pis. 11771-70285) —_— — and Ken Ven- me... a a 70-76-70-69—285. 
tu a came Samm é .. TH-71-68-14—286 
Snead od pe Middlecoft, . Us Arnn'd —— ee 72-72-71-T1—286 
open champion Billy Casper was} Paul Yarney, $1.050 eae ps eight who finished at 287. ura. | Mass. Seen TOT 
The others included former U.S.|_.Pert oe 70-72-72-173—287 
Open champion Tommy Bolt and Crymal River. Fis .. 76-69-68-74—287 
former P.G.A, king Walter Bur-|7e eid op-72-73-73—287 
kemo. oe oan Walley. Cau. _ 68-71-73-74—287 
Souchak came in with a two-| Bebe ae ik Tr over-par 74 and, with only six| eroie'Tvosser, #73 sre. 
players left in the field, there were} 5..¢°s0n* ar ‘a8 eae al 
iy Shes mona ant Sanders Pete oetbed, on 78-70-68-71—287 | y "| Tea $19 ° Sanders, who was in the tour- sarasota. Fis. _. 7274-71-71 —288 
nament ou a pass, shot a final. | “" eens, Mower, Pe .. 20-72-73-73—288 | 
rousd 72, He lost Kis chance or sant ik ceeceues 72-70-69-77—288 
when he three-putteg from 2 Paso. Tex ....... 69-71-73-76—289 
eck, onthe 17 Rete: came , ve eves: 1474-72-69 289) 
Souchak went out of the running | (ce Soest me 77-71-7420] 
when he bogeyed three of the first Don Fairfield. 5262 50 5555: 
four holes, teats ae ot 
* « *« ip are ». '14-72-71-73—290 
; - Jackson Bradley ee . 
At the nine hole turn, Rosburg cheep a ae & 4-73-74—290 
had picked up those six strokes| “Latayetic. La... 71-69-75-75—290' 
on Barber by going out in 30 gt ee Tenn .. 74-69-74,74—291| 
against little Jerry's eS cn soHens 7€70-72-75—291 4 ll ra of 
Ube E + 
) 
& 
= Eg 
He was in the clubhouse: when 
he heard that Barber had parred 
the 16th. It looked like tiny Jerry was home free, He needed only 
two pars to win. But on the 430- 
yard 17th, he put his seven iron   
\Middlecoft Pays 
|High Compliment 
to Jerry Barber - 
MINNEAPOLIS W — Cary 
Middlecoff, one of the many- 
titled men of golf, offered a hand 
of sympathy today to Jerry Bar- 
ber, who was out of the 
PGA title yesterday by Bob Ros- 
burg. 
‘Bob deserves all the credit he 
receives,’ Middlecoff said. 
played fine golf. But 1 played in 
a threesome with Jerry on the 
final day and it made me feel 
sick to see such a fine little guy 
lose that way.”’ 
‘‘Here’s a little fellow who led 
all the way up to the 70th hole. 
He’s in the twilight of his career.: 
He’s been playing fine golf the 
whole tournament and he has 
the wind at his back the final 
two holes. Then he had to loose 
it. . 
“You've never seen a get 
      second into a trap. more out of what God gave him 
than Jerry Barber.” 
  
Finsterwald’s Golf Tip:   
Take Club Away Slowly 
By DOW FINSTERWALD - 
1968 PGA Champion . 
The short approach is one of the! 
most important shots, 
Keep the head still. 
Don’t take the club away from ) 
the ball too fast. If you do, you. 
set up the timing in such a way, 
that your mind will flash to the 
  and wrists and no body dicating the proper club to be one 
with more loft. 
The feet are close together in 
ithe stance, the toes slightly open, 
the face of the club slightly closed) amer 
on the ball. 
The grip is shortened consider. |°" 
ably, 
    “He | ey Results John McMullin, $200 
Fair Oaks. Calif. .... 76-71-69-75—291 
  From Behind THE PONTIAC _PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1959 
Rosburg PGA Champ as Barber Bogeys 
  ast Two Holes     
SPORIS:”   
Boston Comes 
on 2nd Homer Maxwell’s Sunday Blast 
Wasted in 5-4 Tiger 
Loss 
DETROIT w—Manager ainenie 
Dykes says only opé pitch 1s keep- 
ing Paul Foytack’ from becoming 
a consistent winner, 
* * * 
The pitch varies. Sometimes it 
is a fast bal]. Other times it is a 
curve, or epen.a slider. But al- 
ways, it’s the gopher ball pitch. 
Two gopher ball pitches, one   
        B wena iaaaee whence 73-75-71-73292| to Frank Malzone and the other 
meee, ge v= te) fe kl emer bet Toe errier, | ie gers yester- 
Jum, Ferree, 20, ra, en | day. The score was Boston 5, ioe r pace ver a. .. 74-72-71-75—292 Det roit 4. And it was the 20th 
cia eres: Fla. ...... 73-72-74-73—-292) one-run decision the Tigers have 
amaronec, N.Y. . 73-73-72-74-292| dropped, compared with only 
ia agg 7$-73-70-75—293| Sight victories by the same mar-. Julius Boros, $200 gin. 
Southern Pines ...... 72-74-73-74—293 
| Scuddey, Horner, $200 * * * 
Wee Ala. .. 74-71-76-72—293 ite F k's h , 
2 N. J. _ 16-74-70-73~-203| Despite Foytack’s ome run mis- 
| Henrv Williams Jr. $200 sdovrersa8s eries, the strong-throwing- right- 
Mac Main. $200. | hander could have griped a little 
i eee 75-70-73-76—294 about the way his teammates re- Don January, $200 . Be” eng” 73-74-74-73—294 sponded to Boston pitching. The 
Sees 73-69-76-76-204 Tigers got only four hits and ex- 
Bo Wininger, - ore SE for the wildness of starter 
| Prank Scasahen. 40 | Bill Monbouquette, might have end- 
ae: on River, Fla. .. 74-72-70-79—295 oq up with only one run. 
i - “mg pote via. T4-71-74-76-—295 * * * 
Georre” Pass, 's20g° 7 7*7"7575-285' The last time out, Foytack was' . lourto Seen 74-76-69-77—296' a loser when the Tigers got only, 
~~ tgneham, “Mase, _... THOT 676-208 oo and a ve cas ae 
famson. of Baltimore pitchers. t day, Be en cakes 73-72-78 —297 ’ John Barnum. ‘$200 ” the Detroit infield kicked in a pair 
Mee ee ee 7573-72-77-—-2% of unearned runs to make Foy- Rye. N.Y. .....e... 71- 74-75-78—298| Deatarae, ome an ,tack’s' task even more difficult. 
Ele iorn eee oe ele Foytack, whose record now is i bet insville, Mass. .. 74-74- T3-79—300 9. 10, had a 4-2 lead entering the 
« cincinnati 72-73- 75-85—305 | eighth inning. He retired the first   
Two Racing Stats 
Die in Accidents 
BERLIN (UPI)—The world of 
jauto racing today mourned the 
deaths of international stars Jean 
|Behra and Ivor Bueb who died 
ithis weekend as a result of ac- 
‘cidents here and in France. 
* * * 
{ Behra, France’s champion driv- 
er who won the Sebring, Fla., 
race in 1957, died as a result of 
‘injuries several hours after his 
porte car skidded on a wet turn 
|while competing in the sports car 
|grand prix here Saturday. 
| * * * 
Bueb, 35-year-old British veter- 
jan of the race track, died Saturday 
jnight as a result of injuries he 
jsuffered on Sunday, July 26; when 
his car plunged off a hilly track 
at Clermont-Ferrand, France, at 
the start of the Grand Prix D’Au- 
vérgne formula-two race. 
  
  Gopher Pitch Beats Foytack in 8th 
  BACK TO FIRST—Ted Williams of the Boston 
Red Sox bumps into Tiger first baseman Gail 
Harris as he slides safely back into first base in 
the 6th inning of their game in Detroit yesterday. Williams reached first on a walk and then Tiger 
pitcher Paul Foytack attempted to pick him off 
first base. Boston won the game, 5-4. AP Wirephote    Five Flint High School football 
sare have been awarded schol- 
to the University of 
ee including two All-Saginaw Valley backs, Ron Watkins and 
Art Thrash of Flint Central. 
x«* * * 
Colton Weatherston of Or- 
chard Lake: scored 6,165 points 
yesterday and placed 6th in the 
U. 8. Junior Snipe champion- 
ships won by Leslie Larson of 
Jamestown, N.Y., with 7,538 
ts. 
~ x *« 
The tennis clinic sponsored by 
the Pontiac Recreation Depart- 
ment starts today at 4:00 p.m. 
at Pontiac Central courts, with 
Harry Wenzel and Claudia Wasik 
handling the instructions. 
* * * 
Bob Fiori of Flint fired a 306 
to finish in 6th place in the Woodlawn Open golf tournament 
in Ramstein, Germany, yester- 
day. John Panton of Scotland 
defended his title with a 27 
total. x * * 
The, annual ‘‘Meet the Lions” 
banquet will be held Monday night 
August 27th at the Statler-Hilton 
Hotel. Harry Mehre, ex-Notre 
Dame football player, now column- 
ist for the Atlanta Constitution, 
will be the key speaker. 
x -¢ * 
The 1959 National Championship 
Drag Races will be held at the 
Detroit Dragway Sept. 3-7, with 
a new Chevrolet going to te 
winner. 
Church Playotts 
Start Tonight 
The Pontiac Church Softball 
League playoffs begin tonight at 
6 at the Jaycee No. 2 field with 
National champion Trinity Baptist 
playing AL runnerup Salvation 
Army. 
First Baptist, which won 17 
straight as American champion, 
takes on St. Johns Lutheran Tues- 
day in the two-game knockout   
  event. Action is also set Thursday.   
McCovey and Mays Stay Hot; Braves Split   
By The Associated Press 
      | two batters, Pumpsie Green and 
| Pete Runnels, on routine ground- 
ers, | 
Gary Geiger got an infield single, 
;and Foytack walked Ted Williams. | 
Jensen then clouted his 23rd home | 
‘run into the left field seats. 
* * * 
Ike Delock, a Highland Parker 
who entered the game in the sev- 
enth, kept the Detroit bats quiet 
and picked up his seventh triumph. 
The Tigers staked Foytack to 
an early lead. They got one in 
the second on a walk, Frank 
Bolling’s double and an infield 
out. Two more scored in the 
third when Eddie Yost walked 
and Charlie Maxwell slammed 
his 23rd home run into the right 
field pavilion. . 
‘Frank Malzone got two runs 
back for the Red Sox in the fourth 
when, with two out and Jensen 
on first via.an infield single, he 
cracked his 15th home run, 
* * * 
The Tigers added their fourth 
run in the sixth on three walks 
and a sacrifice fly by Bolling. The 
4-2 lead looked safe until Jensen, 
who had collected only a puny 
infield single in 12 previous trips 
in the series, hit his three-run 
blast. 
* * * 
The Tigers had an off day today 
before opening a week-long road 
trip against the Yankees in New 
York Tuesday night. Frank, Lary 
(13-7). will work the series opener. 
  Ww Pet. 
Chicago... ... a © 808 = 
Cleveland... 60 4 pe 3 
Baltimore _..... 53.53 : 11 
Kansas City Stl 51 500 11 
ew York ..... 0 52 -490 12 
seh Be cocso 31 $5 481 13 
= sucenae 4 58 437 «(17% 
Washington . 4 = 62 410 WM 
feago 3  Wamtmaton ne | * rel ame 
icago §$, Washington 3, second game 
Bae 5, Cleveland 4, first sams. 10 
ag Re ae oe var ansas City $ 
Chicago i Framniagion *y RESULTS 
senses ! , here Kew Yor 1 night 
he acy Al if 
sie eit Arsh. tt     
    
  
  
  se EE fa cs w ry ween? s age 
  
         
    ame |Coach Killed in Crash ame   
      The new firm of Willie McCovey 
and Willie Mays are keeping the 
\San Francisco Giants on top of 
ithe National League. They pro- 
jvided the dynamite Sunday while 
Johnny Antonelli's 15th victory — 
a six-hitter — tamed the Pitts- 
burgh Pirates, 5-3. 
* * *® 
McCovey is hitting a sensa- 
tional .500 with 9-for-18 since the 
Giants moved him up from their 
Phoenix farm last Thursday. He 
went 4-for-4 the first day, knocked 
in the winning run the second and 
then went 3-for-5 Satutday. 
* *® * 
The newest Willie hit his first 
major league home run — a 390- 
blast off Ronny Kline with Jim 
Davenport on in the fourth inning. 
Mays put the Giants out in front 
to stay with a seventh-inning 
double off loser Bob Porterfield.   
Its No Secret 
Wertz Wants to 
Play for Tigers 
DETROIT (AP) — Vic Wertz 
wants to come back to the 
Detroit Tigers, and he’s making 
ho secret about it. 
* * * 
The 34-year-old first baseman 
is sitting on the Boston bench 
while Pete Runnels, a second 
baseman by trade, plays first 
for the Red Sox. Owner Tom 
Yawkey ordered a team shakeup 
and apparently Wertz and Dick 
Gernert will sit out most of the 
season, 
pinch-hitting duties. 
Wertz, who took a third strike 
in a pinch hitting role against 
Detroit yesterday, is batting 
.280. He has started only some 
40 games and has been at the 
plate only 186 times. Among 
his hits are six home runs and 
nine doubles and the former 
Tiger slugger has driven in 36 
runs, 
      BOSTON DETROIT. abrh bi abrh bi 
Green 2b 4010 Yost 3b 3110 
Runnels 1b 4000 Chrisley rf 40.00 
aggre 4110 Maxwell if 3212 
Williams if 200.0 aline ¢ 3000 
C-Busby If 0100 Wilson 2100 Jensen rf 4223 Harris 1 3010 alzone 3b 4112 Polling 2 3011 
hite ¢ wets ‘eal ss 3001 
Buddin ss 2010 D-Demeter 1000 
A-Wer 1000 ytack p 3000 
Mahone hese Bunning p 0000 
M'nb‘q’ p20 1000 
B Stephens j 00 8 
Delock ‘p 00 
Totals 34578 Totals 2444 
sae aie out on strikes for Buddin in 7th; Flied out for Monbo oe is 
ith; C—Ran for Williams in 
Grounded out for Veal in 9th: P wited 
jout for Bunning. 
[Boston sac.ccines saieeialers 030—5 | p Detroit 2.0... es eens te 1 000—4 
weereney Veal. -A—Boston 27- | 
10, Det it $7.13 bP teen and Run- nels. LC ston 4. Detroit 6. 
= ye sea cemeee 
il ag ‘sea 
sasaie a R " 8B = ! —_ ue 
rats Poltack L, 9- “10 4 
Bunning... 3 
o! uette, Yost. a 
lak, aL ors sparse i 1 
  
coach Gene Kenny died Sunday of _| LOUISVILLE, Ky. wy = Former} 
Bellafmine College basketball “I know If could help the 
Tigers,” said Wertz. ‘Physically 
I'm in good shape. All I need 
to do is play.” except for occasional. {Once again Davenport scored. 
The Giants added another run in’ 
the eighth off Roy Face (still' 
14-0). 
bg * * 
Los Angeles regained ‘ second 
place, a half game behind the 
Giants by shading Philadelphia 
4-3 while Milwaukee was splitting 
nals took the opener 43 as Lindy 
McDaniel rescued Larry Jackson. 
Lew Burdette won his 15th in the| 
      a pair with St. Louis. The Cardi-| |second 11-5 when Billy Bruton hit] Antonelli became the first in | a pair of three-run triples and 
Felix Mantilla connected for a 
three-run homer. 
* * *® 
Rookie Jay Hook and veteran 
Brooks Lawrence teamed up with 
a five-hit shutout for Cincinnati's 
2-0 decision over Chicago. Hook 
gave up only three hits but 
walked thfge in a row in the 
iseventh, bringing Lawrence from 
the bullpen.     
By The Associated Press 
After Luis Aparicio and Nellie 
Fox bunt and run you dizzy, Al 
Lopez waves in Turk Lown oF 
'Gerry St&léy to shut the door in 
your face.   * * * 
‘White Sox are three games out 
front in the American League to- 
day and pulling away fast, Ex- 
‘cept for the runner-up Cleveland 
Indians, the rest of the league is 
fading into the gloaming. Both 
Baltimore and Kansas City, tied 
for third, are 11 games back. And 
the Yankees? They are 12 games 
down in fourth place. 
* * * 
The little men did it again Sun- 
day in the first game with Wash- 
ington, slashing and racing to up- 
set the punchy Senators, Trailing 
2-1 in the last of the ninth, Apa- 
ricio opened with a single, Fox 
bunted and catcher S 
check threw the ball away. ri 
riclo scored and .Fox dashed to 
third Two intentional walks load- 
ed the bases and Billy Goodman 
plunked a fly ball single into left 
over a drawn in outfield for a 
5-2 victory. 
* * 
Lown, who took over after Billy 
Pierce left for a pinch hitter in 
the eighth, won his eighth despite     
Quarter-Midget Thrills 
    
       
  Chisox 3 Games “Up; 
Orioles Dump Indians a shaky ninth inning. It was his 
fifth straight. 
Again in the second game, when 
Bob Shaw began to stumble in 
the eighth, in came Staley to 
breeze through 1°1-3 hitless in- 
nings, saving Shaw's 10th victory, 
| That is the reason the Chicago|9.3 
Washington hit the only home 
runs. Faye Throneberry got No. 
9 in the first game and Jim Lem- 
on No, 24 in the second. But the 
Senators lost their 15th and, 16th 
in a row, only two short of. their 
club record set in 1948. 
* * * 
Chicago now has won six 
straight and 11 of its last 12 
games. Since the first All-Star 
break they have a 19-5 record. 
in 10 innings, Willie Miranda beat 
Kor-lout a high bounder to the mound, 
driving in the winning run. That 
one little hit minimized Rocky 
Colavito’s 3ist horner and Woody 
Held’s 20th. 
® * ® 
Tito Francona’s seventh hit of 
the day, a three-run homer off 
Billy O'Dell in the ninth gave 
Cleveland a 6-3 decision in the 
second game. Francona had four 
singles in the first game and a 
double. and single before his 
homer. The only time the Orioles 
got him out was when third base- . man Brooks Robinson made « 
a h t Wi diving catch of a line drive, 
3 Wheels Enough to Win lid ag Gary Bell won his llth in the 
Larry Joe Wallace of Pontiac|lights for the first time Thursday | secbnd while Al Cicotte lost his 
drove like a “800” veteran in the eat eigenen, rune rae, rern-|Witnelmn wae Baltinore'e wie 
quartermidget races at Miracle by ree rommy Wilhelm was Baltimore's winner 
Mile yesterday afternoon $3: ron, Joe wajnen,ro-|Qhd, O'Dell, who, worked it both 
With two to go tn the 9 fc: a Miaty ta a ey Barry, care Fins 50 =. oo 
year old ai Larry Joe's :: te rs at Sohn Me-|million mark to 1,009,862 with the wheel came off hia racer. He iene rreleao: (turnout of 94.682, 
finished the . race with three |. Fi eettec! Behe 'Btekiburressh:| Elston Howard drove in four 
wheels and won It. ° Cigec Tver? lien. Javenies/ Tune with two sineles and a dow 
Bill Garcia, driving Griff's Grill ible in New York's 7-5 victory over 
racer, was a winner in one of the Mh Gateie, Pyntiae; Kansas City. Ryne Duren struck 
11-12 year old races, out seven in 3 2-3 shutout innings 
* # ® SNe Bt a BD Gime 
        z. Se ak ue injuries received in an auto acci- jong dent July . 
i pistes, * 
er My oa a The sa yearcid coach was pinned 
ily ‘i p.m in his demolished car when the 
inetnnall i. + {steering wheel penetrated his 
con : chest, : + .    The midgets will race under the|ponece’ Detrolt.   over Bob Grim. e 
Giants, L.A. Sunday Victors the majors to win 15 but he was 
joined about two hours later by 
Burdette, The Giants’ left-hander 
has lost only six. 
the fourth but McCovey’s homer 
got two of them back. Willie 
Kirkland’s. double, 
Hobie Landrith’s single tied the 
score in the sixth and Mays put 
San Francisco out front in the 
seventh. Felipe Alou’s single 
drove in the final score in the 
eighth. 
* * 
Despite Duke Snider’s 14th hom- 
er, the Dodgers trailed the Phils 
3-1 going to the fifth. They rose 
up for three in that. inning, two 
on Charlie Neal’s homer and an- 
other on Snider’s single and Norm 
Larker’s double. Larry Sherry, 
who had taken over in the fifth, 
allowed only one hit the rest of 
the way, fanning five, to record 
his second victory. The smallest 
the game. 
* & « 
Milwaukee’s largest crowd of 
the year, 42.732 watched the 
Braves split, They now have won 
10 of their last 12. After Joey Jay 
lost the opener, the Braves opened 
up on Vinegar Bend Mizell for 10 
of their, 11 rung in the second. 
Milwaukee made four errors. in 
the first and three in the second 
game. 
* * * 
Singles by Eddie Kasko, Vada 
Pinson and Gus Bell and a double 
steal accounted for Cincinnati’s 
two runs in. the third off loser 
Dave Hillman, 
High-Scoring Games 
Feature Legion Play There were runs galore in the District Junior League yes- 
terday with the play highlighted by Royal Oak’s 2nd win in as 
many days, 
Bob Lyons of the Oaks blanked 
Birmingham on one-hit, 4-0, Sat- urday in a makeup -contest fea- 
turing three hits by Ross Gillespie. 
They downed Clawson 7-3 yester- 
day with Bob Lezotte hurling a two-hitter ue Ss a pair of 
himsel: had ot   
  Pittsburgh grabbed a 3-0 lead in - 
followed by: 
crowd of the season, 10,201, saw 
* 
   \ oe a 
a THE PONTIAC. PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1959   
"Hose All-Stars 
Insured by AL 
for Million Each 
CHICAGO (AP)—The “American League will insure for one million dollars“ each the safe transporta- 
tion of four Chicago White Sox playing in today’ S All-Star base- ball game in “Los Angeles, 
The. pennant-conscious Sox de- manded the insurance _ and the 
league agreed today. 
Joe Cronin, league president, 
said. the league will pick up the 
tab for insuring pitcher Early 
Wynn, catcher Sherman Lollar, 
second baseman Nelson Fox and 
shortstop Luis Aparicio on their 
airplane flights from Chicago to Los Angeles and then back East 
to Baltimore where the _first- ie Sox play a night game Tueés- 
ay * 
  
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  . 
AL Short on Hurling ir Sa Gamel ’ 
  
  
in Seattle yesterday. He ran ont DON'T GIVE UP THE SHIP — Art Lasvar 
used all his resources to win a hydroplane race 
from the finish line and then sprawled out on the   boat’s bow and 
of gas 20 yards to get to the finish line. The crowd cheered him 
mightily for his valiant try but the other. craft 
sped by and won the race.   UPI Telephote 
is seen paddling furiously trying 
  
  season highlighted .Sunday’s play- 
off action in the Pontiac Parks & 
Recreation junior baseball pro- 
gram. 
* * * 
Lake Orion nipped Don Nicholie 
2-1 in 11 innings and Lytell-Cole- 
grove edged Pontiac Boys Club 3-2 
in a pair of Class D thrillers while 
two B & B pitchers combined for a 
two-hit shutout of Auburn Heights 
Boys Club in a 5-0 “‘F” triumph in 
some of the featured games. 
Northside Kiwanis held off a 
| late rally to upset State Farm 
8-6 in the other Class F battle. 
The Aces (Hall) and Ultra-Stone 
were Widget winners. 
A double by Jeff Brady, Gary 
Hunter’s single and an error pro- 
duced the clincher for Orion off 
Daryl Thorpe, who fanned 18 in de- 
feat. Nicholie had led until the 
7th when an error set up the ty- 
— 4 Orion, Lytell Win ‘D’ Playoff Thrillers Sorhe of the best baseball of the| ing marker. 
in relief. Roger Williams won 
* * * 
Chuck Kirken won out in a duel 
with Chuck Honchell for Lytell al- 
lowing three -hits and. fanning 13. 
He also had a two-run triple and a 
single. Ken Shaw’s single in the 
Sth decided the issue as Kirken re- 
tired the last 10 batters. 
Roger Hayward struck out 12 
in five innings and Wes Harden 
two for B & B Sewer Cleaners 
with Hayward getting the vic- 
tory. Willie Love had a two-run 
homer and scored ancther on a 
ground out. 
kt k 
N. S. Kiwanis saw an 82 lead 
almost disappear before Dave 
Tinkis took the mound and halted 
the threat after four runs had 
scored on starting pitcher Terry 
Chase. Steve Daniels and Les 
Smith batted in three runs each 
for the winners.     
For Pan-Am Games   
EAST LANSING  — An eight- 
man wrestling team, bolstered by 
burly youth’ and experienced age, 
was picked Saturday to represent 
the United States in the Pan Amer- 
ican games in Chicago. 
The winners and alternates in 
eight weight brackets were selected 
from more than 100 entries who 
battled for honors in the three-day 
elimination held at Michigan State 
University. 
The U. S. team will begin 
training here Aug. 18 against 
second and third place grapplers, 
who could move up in the event 
,of injury or illness. Claude 
Reeck, veteran Purdue Univer- 
sity coach, will head the U.S. 
. 
The New York Athletic Club 
iplaced two men on the team— 
Dave Auble in the 12544 pound 
weight class and Louis Tianti at   
    
4 
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  U.S. Mat Team Selected 13644—to become the only double 
winner. . 
Dale Lewis of Milwaukee, Wis., 
copped the heavyweight position 
over huge Dale Behrman, 257 
pound Michigan State freshman 
football prospect. The San Fran- 
cisco Olympic Club’s entry, Dr. 
M. A. Northrup, finished third in 
the 14714 pound division. The 50- 
year-old veterinarian lost his final 
match to champion Jim Burke of 
Boulder, Colo. 
Champions in the four heaviest 
weight classes were the first to be 
decided in the final day of tryouts. 
Lewis, burly 250 pound former 
University of Oklahoma star and 
a member of the 1956 Olympic 
team, earned ‘his final berth on a 
decision over Bob Morella. The 
decision, plus an earlier pin and 
two draws gave Lewis the post 
despite five penalty points. 
The Pan = team Tepresenta- 
tives and altern: 
1144%4—1, Dick Wilson, Toledo, Ohio; 2, 
Tiernam rines; 3, Oakia 
rfolk, Va. Terance |Johnson, N 
125%   
  s to Auble, New York A.C.: 
orlino, New York A.C; 2, 
Waterloo, Iowa. 
Louis Tiani, New York A.C.; 
i Allen, Army; 3, Lynn Long. 
Boulder, Colo. 
147%—1, Jim Burke, Pew leer Coles z 
Don Studebaker, Army: 
Northrup, San Francisco olympic ‘cw. 
160'2—1, Doug Blubaugh, Army; 
Phil eaaree: Navy; 3, Jesse Ehler, Port- 
Sn 
14% “ee Jim_ Ferguson, Michigan 
State: Roy Conrad, Irving Park 
YMCA, hicago: 3, Nebane Turner, New 
vo. Crank Lares a San Fran- 
gince Olympic Club; Bill Farrell, New 
York A.C.; 3, Tim "wooden. Michigan ate. 
Heavyweight—1, Dale Lewig, Milwau- oF 4 
8 @ 
8 
  Steve Kraft belted two homers 
and Scott Gailbraith one in a 23-2 
romp for the Aces over Baldwin. 
Bill Gaddes’ two-run blast was the 
only hit for the vanquished. . Dan 
Fife’s three hits paced Ultra-Stone 
over East Side, 8-2. 
R-Buoy ‘Flips’ 
but Still Wins 
Exciting Race 
More than usual interest at- 
tached to Sunday’s gail races for 
Watkins Lake Yachting Assn., with 
the top highlight the victory for 
Chuck Morris and Carol Morris in 
R-Buoy,   
ro SG 
Out front in the snipe event, 
Morris’ craft was capsized by a 
heavy gust. The crew, soaked by 
the swamping, managed to right 
their boat and went on to win by 
a tight squeeze over Neil Wheel- 
er’s Little Faster,. skippered by 
Bruce Brede. Guy Duffield was 
3rd in G-Whiz. 
* * * 
Jack Berlien’s Vava-Boom won 
the lightning race, with Fred Brede 
  
2,!Air Force Sgt. Johri L. Keyser of in Busy Bees 2nd in a close fin- J faced new troubles as pilot of the Stengel’s New Lineup/|® 
Lists Mantle Instead|“S 
of Kaline 
: 
LOS ANGELES  — There was 
a 24hour truce in the redhot Ma- 
jor League pennant races today as 
interest switched to the season's 
second Alster ae 
And Casey Stengel * aiveady be- 
leaguered by the grave problems 
of his own New York Yankees, 
American League squad. 
Intensity of the flag race in his 
league apparently left the old 
warrior with only two rested 
pitchers, Baltimore’s Jerry Walk- 
er (8-5) and Pete Ramos (10-13) 
of Washington. 
Manager Fred Haney of Milwau- 
kee was set to lead off with ace 
right-hander Don Drysdale of Los 
Angeles for the nationals, 
* * * 
Today's All-Star®ffair was the 
second edition of 1959, and the 
American All-Stars were seeking 
revenge for their 5-4 loss at Pitts- 
burgh July 7, 
The site was huge Memorial 
Coliseum, the time for the game 
was 4 p.m., PDT, and upwards 
of 50,000 were expected to brave 
90-degree-plus heat for Los Ange- 
les’ first turn as host of the 
event. 
Commissioner Ford Frick and the 
rival league presidents, Joe Cronin 
of the American and Warren Giles 
of the National, plus other top 
names in the game. 
x* ke * 
But the eyes of the fans were set for the galaxy of stars, and doubt- 
less the Coliseum’s controversial 
left field screen, which stands 250 
feet from home plate at the foul 
line and rises 40 feet. 
Casey, with right-hander Drys- 
dale in mind, named no less than 
six lefthand batters to his start- 
ing lineup, 
was something else. The brass was here, including|8!* 
But what to do about pitching “ WasHINGTON * inst Game, ~ 
b rh bi abrh bi 
F Versalles ss ’ 020 Aparicio ss 4220 
Aspr'nie 2b 4010 Fox 2b 4121 
Allison cf 4000 Smith If 30006 
Kill’or’w 3b aii jar c 3000 
mon 4010 Goodman 3b 3011 
bGreene If 00060 Torgeson Ib 3000 
Sievers Ib 4026 ‘is cf 2000 
Korcheck c 4010 McAnany rf 2000 
Thr’'n’b'y rf 4111 Pierce p 2000 
Kem'rer p 30009 =~ 1000 
4 Lown p 0000 , — 32291 Totals 273.52 
ded out for Pierce in 8th; b— 
Ran for Lemon in 9th. 
Washington nog oO 001 100 060--2 
Chicage : 100 600 062—3 
E—Korcheck. " PO-A—Washington 24-10, 
: Chicago 27-9. (None out when winning 
run scores). DP—Fox and Torgeson; Ver- 
salles, Aspromonte and , Sievers; Good~ 
man, Fox and Torgeson: Korcheck and 
aps hao Aparicio, Fox =< Torgeson. 
‘Washington 6, Chicag 
2B—Aparicio. ie -Suensor. sB — 
Sievers. 
: IP H R ER =e 
Kem'rer - 5-11) 8 5 3 3 3 
Pierce . 6 2 2 3 
a ee 
              
—t 
E—Versalles, Killebrew. 
ington oo Chi cons 
ington Chicago 11. 
Beaune Phillips. POA Wash. 
27-12. LOB—Wash- 
HR—Lemon. 8B —Aparicio, Fox. es ees 
  
a—Struck out for Maas in 6th; Struck out for Coleman in 6th; 
Mm Walked eit pordivant i 8th; 
G ded out for Lum n 
New werk Soatbouocdon ” ..210 603 610—7 
Kansas City .............. 2 O21 900—5 
E—Maris, Smith, Lopez. O-A—New PO- 
York 27-8, Kansas City 7-10. DP—Berra, 
ei LOB—New York 12, Kansas 
Cc 
2B Terwilliger 2, Williams 2, Howard. 
S8B—Tuttle. 8—Grim, Terwilligér, Dares | 
  
      x wk * 
  ish. Dave Green in Green’s Dream 
was 3rd 
. * * * 
Tar Baby, , skippered by Jim 
Parshall, took the thistle class, 
with Don Zannoth’s Seaweed and 
Carl Kreitz in _Kritz Kraft’ in that 
order. 
2 Men Share Lead 
in Pistol Tourney 
CAMP PERRY,: Ohio (AP) — 
The first round of firing for the 
1959 National Pistol Champion- 
ship ended yesterday with a two- 
way tie for the lead in the men’s 
division.   
  
wk wk ke 
John W. Hurst, a Los Angeles 
policeman, . and Army Sgt. Santi- 
ago Muchuza of New York City 
jeach had an aggregate score of 
879 points out of a possible 900 
with the .22-caliber pistol. 
* * * 
Mitzi Dryer of St. Louis led the 
women’s division with 818 points. 
* * * 
Third in the men’s field was 
Stockton, Calif., with 877 points 
and Army M-Sgt. Richard Stine- 
man of Columbus, Ga., was 
fourth with 875, 
* * * 
Defending champion James 
Clark of Shreveport, La., ended 
  kee, Wis.; 2, Dave Behrman, Dowagiac, 
Mich, : 3, Bob Morella, New York A.C. the day’s round with*858 points. Stengel was set to start fireballer 
against Kansas City yesterday. 
And four other American 
League All-Star hurlers were 
pressed into action yesterday. 
They were Hoyt Wilhelm and 
Billy O’Dell of Baltimore, Cal 
McLish of Cleveland and Bud 
Daley of Kansas City. 
Still another, Early Wynn of Chi- 
cago, Bas an injured ankle. 
> * * 
Walker « was belatedly named yes- 
terday to replace his teammate, 
catcher Gus Triandos, and Ramos 
was subbed for temmate Camilo 
came up with injuries. 
Walker pitched one inning in re-| 
lief Saturday and Ramos |last/| 
pitched Friday night. He hag lost 
five straight. 
x k& * 
barring further changes, were Pete 
Runnels of Boston, Nellie Fox of 
the White Sox, Ted Williams of the 
Red Sox, Yogi Berra and switch- 
hitting Mickey. Mantle of the Yank- 
ees, and Roger Maris of Kansas 
City. « 
  
SSARI, Sardinia—Salvatore Burruni. Ryne Duren of New York. THis! cn tect 
would have been a dilly. But he! 
had to use Duren for 3 2:3 innings 
Pascual. Triandos and Pascual 
Casey’s lead-off left-hand batters, | §                       
      
  Second Game 
BALTIMORE CLEVELAND 
abrh bi ab rh bi ROMCO 
Boyd te $010 Power ib 4110 y wer 1 
Pilarcik rf 4110 Minoso if 12228 3424 East Lake Street oodling If 4120 Tancona ¢ . 
Shetrone cf 2000 Colavito rf 4000 Minneapolis, Minnesota insberg c 4010 Stric'l'nd ss 3100 
Robinson 3b 4012 Baxes 3b 4010 
ardner 2b 30190 Nixon c 4131, 
aPearson 1110 Bell p 4000 
ieee 2b ; 3 : ; 
appas 
bTasby P 1000 
Pp 0000 
OFetals 35 3123 aoe 35 6115 “> 
lend for Gardner > b—Struck e 
Balti a > a 000 002 001—3 Pe 90 2S ec 5 
\Clavelaad _.. 001 100 013—6 Just say E—Robinson._ Gardner. spon ae Bane the word! 
more 2: evelan re ou 
when winning run scored). DP—Martin, 
Strickland and Power. LOB—Baltimore 9, 
Cleveland 9, 
2B—Boyd, Ginsberg, Francona, Nixon, 
Robinson, Klaus. 3B—Nixon. HR—Fran- wont! 
cona. S—Pilarcik, mecrone a 
Ps he H a aa 
PAS Seiom ee 
O'Dell (L, 6-9) .. 8 Fs 3.93 #060 06 
Beep a oe a. ae oe Bein —By ‘ap s o jins- 
Ba. Tae ee ee “You're the boss”, at BEN EFI 
wt, xouee eCOND AME nce Bills piling up? Only BENERCIAL! ae Bivolae aap a : abrb bi ab rk bl SPECIAL gives you cash for left-over bills, cas : 
Blas‘ame 2) 3010 Mantilla 2 4233 vacation, plus International Credit Card to get extra er athews : 
dMusial 1900 Aaron rf 4221 cash wherever you go— imo! . coc 
Flood-cf 1-100 Torre Ib 1000 Phone today! 
Byer ie GEES matte 3 8%5 er C) Gunn’ rt 4136 Bruton ct 4126 Loans $25 to $500 on Signature, Furniture or Car 
rowe ce c 
Smith c 4000 bCrandall ¢ 1101 7 WEST LAWRENCE STREET, PONTIAC 
([Sshanno et ete ee ie 2nd Fleor, Lawrence Bidg. « Phone: FEderal 2-9249 annon ss 
|Mizell p . 21106 OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT <- PHONE FOR EVENING HOURS 
[Stone p 0000 Loens mode to residents of oll serrending lowes cGray 2000 
Totals 36594 Totals 4111211 
a—Lined out for Grammas in 2nd; Ran for Rice in 5th; c—Struck out for| ‘ aoe in 7th; d—Fouled out for Miller yi in 
| ee eee bog 210 5 
Dirwamkee 7 im 04 eet FINANCELCO. - athews 2, _ ICIAL FINANCE CO. St. Louis — eure 27-12. DP— pe emai meetoellts 
Mantilla, and Adcock; Mathews, 
Mantilla and Forres LOB—St. Louis 5, Mil- 
waukee 9. 
2B—Cimoll, Burdette. 3B—Bruton 2. HR 
—Crowe, Boyer, Mantilla. S—Logan. SF— 
Crandall. 
“IP H R ERBBSO 
pad bod a .. 513 9 10 10 7.1 
ae 23.2 1 1 060 06 
Miller 9 1 6 0 06 
Burdette CW, 15-10) 9 ® 3 3-% 2 
BP — By Mizell (eens): WP 
| atizell. U—Jackowski, -Delmore, Barlick. 
T—2:33. A—42,732. 
  a Italy, defeated Horacio. Acavallo, 113.) 
Argentina, 10. : 
* = 66 
  
  
  Averages of All-Stars 
  
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Ss OU ET Se ee   LOS ANGELES (AP)—The batting andj Wynn, Chi. ....... 165 79 129 14 § 3.49 x pitehing records of the players selected O'Dell, Balt, oo... 131 56 6 9 3.71 or the second Ma ague All-Star|Ramos, Wash. .... 162 65 10 13 4.22 ee 1959 (complete through Sunday's ied . LEAGUE e: 
AMERICAN LEAGUE Player, Club BH HR RBI Pct. Fy compute PRECISION INSTALLATION STARTE: emple, Cin, ..... 418 137 5 48 .328 
Player, Club Aen H BR RBI Pct.| Mathews, Mil. .... 383 115 30 73 .300 mer BOO. ccc 384 121 5 35 .315;Aaron,® Mil. ...... 413 151 29 87 .366 ee. 422140 «2 «(51 (332) Mays; SF. ||... 114.17 «67 «1293 Williams.” Bos. 210 $0 8 32 .238| Banks, Chi. 394 122 29 «99 310 Berra, N.Y. ...... 305 89 «414 45 (299 usial, St. 254 66 «68 «(33 260 Mantle, N.Y. ..... #59 104 20 55-290 Moon. L.A 356 104 «8 «(52 292 Maris, K.C.. .....~ 91 14 58 (326 Crandall, Mil. 351 89 12 47 (254 alzone, Bos. .... 405112 15 64 277 ERVES Aparicio, Chi. ||| 406111 5 40 .273'Cepeda, SF. .... 407 132. 21 «73 «324 ESERVES = (Gilliam, L.A 348211 2 «19 (319 Power, Cle. ...... 423-129 9 46° .305| Robinson, Cin 379 120 24 «89 317 Rich'son N.Y. .... 252 68 1 14 .270'Neal. LA |... 421128 14 59 304 Kill'br’w, Wash. . 371 91 33 81 .245\Logan, Mil. | .”. 305 92 13 36 [302 Woodling. Balt 314107 13 61 341| Boyer, st. L. |... 382115 19 65 301 
Raline, 2d 5 337 108 8 30 33 Aas x watt we 8 ” 3 Pt ea 1 Hr. While You Wait t aline, 5 BOeOR *ner'ski, - 3 ° Minoso, Cle. |... 387 114 15 67 .295'Cunn‘ham. st. 315 108 441 1343 COMPARE THESE SAVINGS - Allison, Wash, ... 417117 27 65 .281| Pinson, Cin. 437 137 14 «63-1314 Deste Ger gee 
Sore ws Se ROR Ee BR BR gal ake evers 3 ae 5 . 
‘ 
ho Ye 3 oe Hs ‘363 | Pttene Club IP BB SO WL ERA a $3080 9-93 $20.85 ar; / er, lw 
Pitcher, Club IP BB SO WL ERA Anes ‘hart ane ot 15.115 13 6. 264 a ee ee cher, Clu | Antone’ — / ren, N.Y ...58 34 75 1 3 1.09 Conley, Phils. |...) 150 29 8 9 7° 2.76 PLYM. | 27.00; 9.95| 17.05 Wilhelm, Balt. ../. 161 $2 93 11 7 2:35) . Mio... 195 52.101 1410 2.82 STUD. | 30.36) 12.95) 17.41 Ala &3 Walker, Balt | 120 34 71 8 5 2-63 Drysdale L.A. .... 199 60 173 14 6 2.89 Waler, Balt. ..... 120 34 71 8 5 263/8. Jones, SF. |... 183 84 1441410 3.15 PONT. | 34.45) 12.95) 17.50 Wheels 7} McLish, Cle. ...... 170 48 7913 4 2.86 Elston, Chi. |...... 57 2% 87 5 4 3.16 7.76 Daley, K.C. ....... 136 39 7712 6 2.98| Burdette, Mil. .... 198 25 5815 10 3.95 RAMB. | 37.70 12.95! 24.75 Ford, Chevy, Plymouth 
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ef     BONDED BRAKES SHOPS 
121 WAYNE ST., Pontiac 
behind Federals or Panel Trucks 
BRAKES {£: 
RELINED 
‘| 0” 
er trecks 
sHabtly higher. Major League Boxes 
Lown (W. 8-2) 3.6 6M 6 
Bal—Pierce. 7 ware Rice, Rommel, 
Stevens. T—2:05, 
Second Game 
CHICAGO WASHINGTON 
ab rh bi abrh bi 
Aparicio ss 51006 Versallies ss 5010) 
Fox 2b 4211 Thr'n’b'y rf 4001 
Smith if 4221 Allison cf 3100 
Romano ¢ 4113 Kill'br'w 3b 4000, 
Battey c 1000 Lemon If 4121) 
Landis cf 3110 eae Ib 2001) 
Phillips 3b 5132 Naragon c 3010, 
Phd hee Ib 3011 Aspr’inte 2b 1100 
McAnany rf 4111 aBecquer 1000, 
Shaw p 2000 Samford 2b 1010, 
Staley p 0000 Kaat 1000 
Griggs p 1010 
Stobbs p 0000 
bBertoia 1000 
W'des’hick p 0000 
cGreen 1000 
Kem'rer p 0000 
Totals 359109 Totals 32363 
a—Grounded out for Aspromonte in 6th; 
b—Grounded out for es wart = ee c— 
Flied out for Woodest: 
Wa oor woe ss 
ER BB SO 
Kaat (L, 6D .223 2 3 1:3 «© 
Griggs... see 3 7 6 6 4 1 
Biobbs neietorele «raicie 130 0 0 0 0 
Ma ftieiadiste 1360 0 0 60 6 
.Kemmerer _....... 1 1 0 0 121 
Shaw WwW. 10-3) 72-36 3 3 6 #7 
Staley 113 0 0 0 oO @ 
U_Rice, ‘Rommel, Stevens, Napp. T— 
3:03 866. 
NEW YORK KANSAS CITY 
~ abrh bi ab rh bi 
Rich'son 2b 5000 Tuttle cf §222 
Lopez 2b 3220 of bee if 5020! 
Boyer 3b ‘1000 Williams 3b 5 03 2) 
Mantle cf 3100 Maris rf 5000 
Berra c 4331 Lumpe ss 4010 
Howard If 4034 dBoone 1000 
Bauer rf 4011 Hadley lb 4110 
ubek 5000 Smith c 4021 
Thr'n'’b'y Ib 4110 Terwger 2b 3220 
Terry 2010 Daley p 0000 
Maas p 0000 Grim p 1000! 
aSiebe 1000 Coonan 0000 
Blaylock p 6000 bHouse 1000 
ren p 1000 Sturdivant p 0.000) 
Shantz p 0000 cWard 0000 
Tsitouris p 00060) 
Totals 37.7116. Totals 38 5 13 5) i 
SAN shacaccnt om 0 PITTSBURGH - 
rb bi ab r h.bi 
Brandt If “300 Skinner If 4020) 
aWagner 1000 Groat ss 4000 
Alou if 1611 Clemente rf 3100 
Davenp't 3b 4220 Stuart Ib 412 1| 
McCovey lb 5112 Mejias cf 414 0 
a s cf 4021 3b 3011) 
: — 3 She bo tesa 
ipencer urgess ¢ 
Landrith c 307) ine p- 2000 
Bressoud ss 3100 Porterf'd p 606006 
Antonelli p 4020 Green p 00600 
—— 1006 
Face p 0000 
Totals 35 5115 Totals 31363 
a—Flied out for vale _ 6th; 
Popped out for Green 
[ 
  Pittsburgh www eee 
San Francisce ...... lla—5 
E—None. oon — Pittsburgh 24-7, = 
Francisco DP—Bressoud and 
covey: Lob Pittaburgis 2. San Prancece 
Paseo Kirkland, Mays. HR—Mc- 
ove 
y IP H RE ER BB SO 
Klin -513 7 3 °3 3 «2 
Portert’d. (L, 01) 1 111421 2 
Green sees ese 230 6 0 0 6 
Pac 1 3b ‘ : 
Aclonetil (Ww, 15-6) 9 6 3 3 
WP—Porterfield. U—Burhart, Coulatia, 
Venzon, Donatelli. T—2:21g A—22,653. 
PHILADELPHIA LOS ANGELES 
ab rh bi abrh bi 
Koppe ss 30060 Giliam 3b 3120 
Ashburn cf 4010 weg) 2b 4112 
Bouchee lb 3100 Mon If 3000 
Philley rf 4110 Snider rf 4221 
H. A’d’s'n 1f4000 Larker 1b 402 
Freese 3b 3110 Demeter cf 4000 
G.A'd’s'n 2b 3000 Roseboro c 3010 
Lonnett ¢ 3012 Wills ss 300 
Cardwell p 2000 Craig p 1000 
Phillips 0000 aFairly 1000 
bBolger 1000 Sherry p 1000 
Farrell p, @000 
cPost 10006 
Totals 32342 Totals 3148 
up for Craig in 4th; 
.. 100 200 
Los Ee prvede A 
‘Wills, Gilliam. PO-A— 
—Roseboro and Wills 
4, Los Angeles 6. 
  
HOLLYWOOD. Calif.—Irish Pat 
148'3, Toledo, Ohio, sto Dillard 
son, 152, Los Angeles, 
off, 204, 
shall, 1854, Detroit 
        a—Popped b—]E 
Fouled out, for reon oth = Tth; c—Flied)” 
. Ande 
00—3! 
000 130 00x—4 
Philadelphia. 347, Los Angeles 27-10. DP| ® 
. LOB—Philadelphia 
2B—Philley, Roseboro, Larker. HR — 
Snider, Neal. SB—Gilliam. 
IP R ER BB 80 
Cardwell (L, 5-7 3413 8 4 4 2 
Phillips ssicseese 123 0 0 0 06 
Parrell 2 0 0 60 1 
Craig _4 3.3 0 2 
Sherry (W, 2-2) .. § 1 0 0 0 : 
* “err Basco Secory. Dixon. T—| 3 
ont STEUBENVILLE, Ohio—Willi Besman-| | Milwaukee.  oeniet Meaty. Mar-| © Man eh ge Cuba. se, =f   
      
              
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Hausman Leads Qual ~ Ee PCH Golfer 
‘Has 36-34-10 1 
at Municipal 29 Players in Finals This Weekend Include 
Ex-Champs 
Bob Hausman, 24-year-old bar- 
ber, led the 20 qualifiers in the city 
Men’s Medal qualifying round who 
will enter the 3-hole finals this 
weekend at Pontiac Municipal 
course. 
Hausman fired a 36-34—70 Satur- 
day to take honors one stroke 
ahead of Bill Pembroke who had 
35-36—71 and Dick Robertson, 
37-34—71, 
There were 39 entries in the Sat- 
urday round with those carding 79 
or less qualifying for the finals. 
Hausman, who played on the 
same team at Pontiac Central 
with Pembroke, the tied runner- | 
up, birdied the par-4 third hole 
by dropping a 6 foot putt. He 
then took ‘a bogey-5 on the 4th 
and a double bogey-5 on the 5th 
where he three putted after chip- 
ping on. 
On the back nine he birdied the 
13th, a par-3, with an 8 footer and 
on the 16 he dropped a 20 foot putt 
for a birdie-4. 
Hausman won the city match “THE PONTIAC BRESS,: MONDAY, ‘AUGUST 8, 1959 
fiers in. City Medal Play   ‘ La 
a’ 
still completed the double play.   AP Wirephote 
SOFT BIRD — Milwaukee Brave shortstop Johnny Logan (23) 
finds a soft landing on the back of Cardinal Joe Cunningham (15) 
in the 6th inning of their second game yesterday. Cunningham 
tried to take Logan out of the play with the slide but the Brave Benefit Tilts Net $300   
Waterford Township softball fans 
enjoyed a jammed weekend ofex- 
hibition contests on the Drayton 
night double-header benefit for 
Jerry Hesse, and Sunday’s bill 
attracting big audiences. 
Saturday’s ‘bénefit “produced 
about $300 which was given 
Hesse to help pay for medical 
care for a broken ankle sus- 
tained in a league contest sev- 
eral week’ ago. 
Benefit card winners were Wa- 
terford league B All-Stars, 9-6, 
over Lakeside Royals, and Shaw’s 
1958 city league champs, 7-0, over 
current kings, Snobol. 
Sunday's game resulted in a win 
for National League All-Stars, 4-2, 
over Class B leaders Nonne’s. 
A 5-run blast in the 5th, with the 
Royals ahead 6-3 proved the win- 
ning move for the Class B All- 
Stars. Stars added another counter 
in the 6th to clinch the argument. 
Dale Badder was the winner, Walt 
Travis the loser. Perce McConner 
hurled the 6th for Royals, also 
combined with Ken Spears for 
Shaw’s shutout over Snobol in the 
afterpiece. Dick Shell was loser. 
Shaw’s 2-run first frame actually 
was the winning effort. 
The C All-Stars bunched four of 
their five hits for all four runs in     
Rookie Pleases Eagles’ Camp   
play tournament while a junior at 
PCH in 1952 and he also won the 
city Jaycee tourney while in high 
school. 
Saturday, the 20 qualifiers plus 
nine former champions of those 
among the top five last year, will 
play 18 holes and then continue 
with another 18 holes on Sunday. 
CITY MEDAL QUALIFIERS: 
  
      
    
  
  
        
  ALIFIERS: Joe Ada 
; J. Harrison 44-36—80; Law 
44-36—80; Jim Pettiford 43-38—81:. Norm 
Pelt ; Rufus Anderson 41-41—82; 
John Janczarek Jr. 44-38—82; Ted Figa 
44-38—82; Howard mir = — 
Bob Finley ; Bob idle 44- 
87; James : Kea ; Bob 
: Randy Hancock 45-46—91; ake 
Bears By The Associated Press 
The Chicago Bears plan to find 
out quickly if bustling fullback 
34—70/Rick Casares is going to figure 
7 full-time in their offensive back- 
73 field plans for 1959. 
The 225-pound veteran severely 
Taislashed a toe in a boating acci- 
dent this summer and there was 
-—78\considerable speculation whether 
he could be ready for fulltime duty 
78/in coach George Halas’ backfield. 
Halas put Gasares through his 
first running exercises yesterday 
| with no apparent damage as the 
Bears ended the second week of 
training at their St. Joseph 
‘| College, Ind., camp. But it'll 
take a more testing workout to 
determine just how fast and far 
    Bruce 47-45—92; Ken McClintock 
48-48—96; Harold Daniels (no card) and 
Andy Lindsay (no card). 
Ralston, Beste Win 
KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP)   Casares can go. 
  Just how important Casares is 
to the Bears is reflected in the 
1958 rushing statistics in which he 
finished sixth in the NFL. The 
Dennis Ralston’s strong overhead [er Yeareld Florida great gained 
game defeated Bill Lenoir of Tuc- 
son, Ariz., yesterday for the US. 
junior singles title in the finale of 
the 44th National junior boys ten- 
nis championship. 
Ralston won by scores of 46, 651 yards in 176 attempts for a 3.7 
average. This was 32 more than 
teammate Willie Galimore, who 
finished in the No.7 spot. 
Halas yesterday singled out 
rookie halfback Pete Johnson as 
the outstanding Bear newcomer so 
  75, 64, 6-4, in the 
far. Johnson, a 6-24, 200-pound   
Softball Playoff Openers —   
Royals, Casa 
‘The Class A Lakeside Royals 
and Casa Mia, Pontiac Merchants 
in “B,” Arro Realty and Harri- 
son’s Grill in C, and Class D. 
downed Elks 810 by 3-1\ Roger 
? 
Girl Riders Battle 
for LO Show Honor 
A pair of capable, determined 
feminine riders yesterday high- 
lighted the annual fall Lake Orion 
Saddle Club - LO horse 
show at Kelly’s Park. More than 
100 horses took part in the 22- event show. : 
Birmingham’s Sandy Wells 
emerged as tops, with her final-   
and actige’ event. Sandy rode Min, Sandra was up on Queen and Champ. 
Carol Curran’s (LO) beautiful Palomino, Gallant Parader, won the parade class over a big field of splendidly equipped horses.   JBeach, Calif., Mia Win 
Reynolds of Casa Mia beat Deni’s 
& Herks on three hits, 6-1. 
Play continues tonight. 
  
Foreigners Hard Court 
Singles Champions 
DENVER (AP) — India’s agile 
Ramanathan Krishnan and San- 
dra Reynolds, 20-year-olc South 
African, won the singles titles 
yesterday in the National hard 
court tennis championships. 
With smooth, almst effortless 
play, Krishnan clinched it by 
running Whitney Reed of Alame- 
me Calif., off hig feet 12-10, 6-3, 
Miss Reynolds, top seeded 
among foreign women entrants, 
won her finals match with fav- 
ored Beverly Baker Fieitz, Long halfback from Virginia Military 
Institute, has been particularly 
impressive in blocking and passing 
drills. 
Another rookie, Art Powell of 
San Jose State; has brought cheer 
into the life of coach Buck Shaw 
of the Philadelphia Eagles. 
Shaw, whose team had a pitiful 
2-9-1 record last year, is looking 
for rookie who can jazz up the 
Eagles’ offense. 
* * * 
“There’s no telling how far he 
(Powell) can go or the limit of his 
ability," Shaw said of his llth 
round choice, who led the 
*s pass receivers in 1956. 
He been working out as a de- 
fensive safety man at the Eagles’ 
Hershey, Pa., camp, but also is 
being looked on as a candidate 
for the end or halfback spot be- 
cause of his speed and size. 
axa & k= 
Buddy Parker, coaching the to Test Casares’ Injury fornia, Pa., camp, also had smiles 
today after his team’s first week 
of training. However, end Jimmy 
Orr and rookie halfback Dewey 
Bohling are on the temporarily dis- 
abled list after receiving con- 
cussions during a scrimmage last 
Friday. 
* * * 
Twenty-two rookies are still in 
the San Francisco 49ers Moraga, 
Calif., camp, along with 33 vet- 
erans, after coach Red Hickey cut 
three players yesterday. They 
were halfback Frank Bailey of 
Rice; halfback Joe Belland of 
Arizona State College at Temple 
and Jerome Jurczak, a linebacker 
from St. Benedict’s College (Kan.). 
The pro teams had yesterday 
free from hard scrimmage but 
contact work in all camps is due 
to resume today. The first ex- 
hibition game involving an NFL 
team is Wednesday, when the 
Chicago Cards take on the Toronto 
Aragonats of ‘he Canadian Big   Pittsburgh Steelers at their Cali-|Four football union. Plains field; with the Saturday| Ralph All-Stars, Shaws Victors 
the 
rain makeups, were listed as for- 
feits when both Dobski’s and Sno- 
bol, in the Waterford league, 
failed to have enough players. 
Eagles and Arrows were given 
the games. 
Area Skeeters 
Fire Perfects Bob Thiefels and Bud 
Brown Card 100s for 
NSSA’s Opening Test   
(Special to Pontiac Press) 
LYNN HAVEN, Va. — Pontiac’s 
Bob Thiefels was one of four 
Michigan skeet shooters breaking 
ing round in the National Skeet 
Shooting Assn,, world champion- 
ships at Princess Anne Gun Club 
at this place. 
Other “perfects” were carded 
by Bud Brown of Birmingham 
(one of three Brown brothers in 
the big shotgun tournament) by 
“se Sedleckey of Baldwin, Mich. 
Howard Confer, Detroit. 
Additional Michigan scores 
cluded: 
Florence Schmidt, Royal Oak 95: Fru- 
man, Detroit, 91; Eddie Brown, Birming- 
ham, 97; Ains Borsum, Baldwin, 91: 
Floyd Gilmore, Wyandotte, 94: Chet 
Crites, Detroit, 96; Bill Brown Jr., Bir- 
mingham, 93; Jim Ashmore, Fe: le, 
98; Ed Richcreek, Detroit, 80. 
  
Ruth Title Won 
by Birmingham 
The Birmingham Pioneers made 
certain there will be a new state 
champion in Babe Ruth ball by 
eliminating the 1958 titlist yester- 
day at Birmingham. 
Carol Kolocsay hurled four-hit 
ball as the Detroit Northwest 
Americans bowed 10-2 in the Dis- 
trict final. Birmingham exploded 
after Northwest went ahead 2-0 
in the 4th. 
  100 clay birds for a perfect open-| 
in- : a, 
"Michigan State and Sowthern | California will meet for the first Rochester in the International 
league, time in football on a home-and- King Changes Positions 
  “CINCINNATI (AP) — Tha, Cin- a ea eS one 
cimnati .Reds Sunday night re-| King bara ee ee 
Jockey Njck Shuk rode five win- leased pitching coach Clyde King aa fein tad 
ar be oe ners at Pimlico in one day in 1956. so he could become manager of'coaching \ost. 
“PONTIAC-OAKLAND COUNTY AREA Reds ‘in King's 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  1 Aye S T Based on U.S. Gov't forecasts of Tide and Barometric Pressure. Fish bite best duning high pressure 
3 4 #5 6 7 +8 9 10 MON. UR. SAT. SUN. MON. 
FAIR PARTLY ) RING &       
      
  
  
            
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BE 
F 3 ' : Cot 1, . HH 
Nelle Re 21 , ete ete e 
M.! Ph | Am. pa | AM! PM, Ah. PRLIAM.'PM.[ AM.” PM.[AM. PM[AM. pm|     
  
  
      
  
                      
                  
      
   
    COURTESY OF 
   Bank 
A C I: Bot National ACCOUNTS OF PONTI 
Member F DIC. . 
    
  
      
NEW ‘59 WAGONS 
RADIO $] 99 3° 
HEATER 
            BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 
Mi. 6-3900 
  
  
  63, 62.   
  
211 S. Saginaw 
  SPECIAL! 
1959 Rambler Wagon 
41959 
BILL SPENCE - Rambler FE 8-4541 
  ONE OF A “Me      
    is oe 
ee "i 
Stries 
e 
THE PONTIAC PRESS-   A-1 accomodations for advertisers 
at the daily newspaper! 
THE DAILY NEWSPAPER is probably the most accom- 
modating and adaptable medium that any advertiser 
could ask for, He can run a one-inch ad or a two-page 
spread or a special section. He can run it once a month, 
once a week or as many times in the same issue as he 
wishes. In fact; the daily newspaper is 80 accommodating 
tiiat an advertiser can get his ad in the newspaper over: | 
night. No wonder all advertisers place more money in 
the daily newspaper than any other-medium! Rp. 
Be   WHAT RESULTS SHOULD YOU GET 
WHEN YOU HAVE YOUR CAR TUNED ? 
Minor tune-up—major tune-up . : . the engine of your GM car will deliver 
its “built-in best” with educated service at.recommended intervals. And you 
get the best of both with Guardian Maintenance available only through 
your General Motors Dealer. You gain two ways when you keep . 
your car up-to-par with Guardian Maintenance . . . the pleasure of driving 
a car that’s road-ready and eager-for-action—the economy of bossing  __ 
an engine that squeezes every ounce of power from every gallon of fuel. So if 
your car is logy and listless, take it to your GM Dealer for Guardian 
Maintenance. He services your GM vehicle best . . . because he knows it 
best! Let him give your car an educated tune-up TODAY. 
FACTORY-TRAINED MECHANICS who 
knew your GM car inside-out. 
PONTIAC 
OLDS 
BUICK 
‘CADILLAC 
GMC: FACTORY-APPROVED PARTS that 
match your GM car perfectly. 
MOST MODERN EQUIPMENT to service your GM car right the first time. 
PERSONAL INTEREST in you and your] 
GM car to protect your investment. 
  Yr 
See your 
CADILLAC > BUICK OLDSMOBILE — PONTIAC + CHEVROLET - GM C- Dealer for Guardian Maintenance   re      7 4 } 
1 ey ; 
j ih         
  
WILLIAM L. CRANE 
Service for William. L. Crane, 39, of 2214 Garland Ave,: Sylvan Lake, will. be , held at ll am. 
Wednesday at Donelson-Johns neral Home. Burial will follow in Oak Hill-Cemetery, . Mr. Crane died unexpectedly of a heart attack at Pontiac General Hospital yesterday. 
He was a staff sergeant in the USS. Air Force during World Wat Il, having served in England for 
four years. He was employed as a laboratory technician at Bald- 
win Rubber Co. 
Surviving are his wife, June: two children, Royal and Richard, 
at home; one sister and two broth- ers, 
MICHAEL M. HADDAD 
Service for Michael Moses‘ Had- 
dad, 83, of 2085 Pontiac Dr., will 
be held at 10 a. m. Wednesday at St. Vincent de Paul Church with 
burial at Mt. Hope Cemetery. The |g Rosary will be said at Brace-Smith 
Funeral Home at 8:15 p. m. Tues- 
day and prayers will said at 
9:15 a. m. Wednesday at the fu- 
neral home. 
Mr. Haddad, retired owner of Haddad Sweet shop, was dead on arrival at St. Joseph Mercy Hos- 
pifal Sunday. He had been ill for 14% years. ° : 
Surviving are his wife, Eliza- beth; sons and daughters, Mrs. Ernest Brinson and William, both 
of Pontiac, Mrs. Donald Tuma of 
Huntington Woods and Richard of Washington, D. C. ‘ 
MRS. ELLIOTT HEALY 
Mrs. Elliott (Beatrice M.) Healy, 64, of 493 Lowell St., died unex- pectedly Saturday at her home. “She was employed by Pontiac 
Motor Co. 
Surviving are one son, Leo Bow- den of Drayton Plains; one daugh- 
ter, Margaret Bowden of Holly; 
two brothers, Bert Monroe of Pon- tiac, Selby of Lapeer; two sisters, 
Mrs. Gladys Jangowski of Clio and 
Mrs. Hazel Peterson ' of Averill, 
and two grandchildren. 
Service will be held 2 p.m. 
Wednesday at DeWitt C. Davis 
Funeral Home with burial in White 
Chapel. 
MRS. LEVI KINNER 
Mrs. Levi (Hattie) Kinner, - 86, 
of 71, Lafayette St., died wnex- 
pectediy Saturday at her home. 
She was a member of a Meth- 
odist Church in New York. 
She is survived by two daugh- 
ters, Mrs. Viola Colegrove in New |: York and Mrs. Myrtle Jones, with 
whom she lived. 
Service will be held 2 p.m. Wed- 
nesday at Shaffner Funeral Home, Fu-| Boliyar,. N.Y., with. burial . in 
Maple Grove. Cemetery, Shingle- 
house, Pa. The body is now at 
Huntoon Funeral Honie, 
MRS. JOSEPH KOWALSKI 
Mrs. Joseph (Anna) Kowalski, 
47,.of Bay City was dead on ar- 
rival at St. Joseph Hospital after 
suffering a heart attack Sunday. 
She was visiting her daughter, 
Mrs, Richard Curnof of Drayton 
Plains, Also surviving are her hus- 
band, another daughter, Joan at 
home; two sisters, a brother and 
three grandchildren. 
Her body will be taken from 
Coats Funeral Home this evening 
to Trahan Funeral Home, Bay, City 
for service and burial Thursday. 
MRS. MICHAEL SLAVIN 
Mrs. Michael (Estella G.) Sla- 
vin, 74, of 36 Clarence St., died 
today following an illness of one 
year. 
Employed by Waite’s Dept.’ 
tore, she was a member of the 
Order of the Eastern Star. 
She is survived by one daughter, ' 
Mrs. Maxine Hayward of Pontiac; 
and one sister, Mrs. Alice Messner, 
of Detroit. 
Service will be held 1:30 p. m. 
Wednesday at Huntoon Funeral 
Home. with burial in Roseland 
Park Cemetery. 
MRS. WALTER WALLACE 
Mrs. Walter (Frances W.) Wal- 
lace, 60, of 627 E. Kennett St., died 
Saturday at Pontiac General Hgs-, 
pital following an illness of two: 
months. | 
She .was formerly employed by, 
East Town Bakery, Flint. 
Mrs. Wallace is survived’ by one 
son,. Lyle W. McClements of Pon- 
tiac; a grandaughter, and a sis- 
ter, Mrs. Lewis Jolls of Brighton. 
Service will be held 1 p. m. 
Wednesday at Voorhees Siple Cha- 
pel with buria] in Fairview Ceme- 
tery, Brighton, “5 
CLARE K. EDWARDS 
DEERFIELD TOWNSHIP—Serv- | 
ice for Clare K, Edwards, 48, of} 
4212 Millis Rd., will be held at} 
1 p.m, Tuesday at Baird’ Funeral| 
Home. Burial will follow in Clark-|   
  | | 
Lapeer County General : Hospital 
after a prolonged illness, He was 
employed as maintenance man at 
the Lapeer State Hone and Train- 
ing School. 
Suryivig are his wife, Bernice; 
three daughters, Diane, Karen, 
home, and a brother, Harry of 
jakwood., 
CHARLES ERIGSON 
LAPEER — Service for Charles 
  Glenda and a son, Thomas, all at | 
Erigson, 92, of 832 S. Main St.,| 
will-be held: at 2 p.m, Wednesday ' at Baird Funeral Home. Burial 
will follow ‘in Mount Hope Ceme- 
tery. 
| Mr. Erigson died today-at Rest 
Haven Convalescent Home after a 
long illness: . - 
He was employed as a steam 
fitter for the Detroit Edison Co. 
until his retirement about 20 years 
ago. 
Surviving are two daughters, 
Mrs. Marion Schuman of Lapeer 
and Mrs, Grace Sinnott of Flint, 
a son, Carl of Lapeer; a brother, 
Henry of Caro; six grandchildren 
and seven great-grandchildren. THE PONTIAC 
) Deaths in Pontiae and Nearby Areas: * GEORGE L. LEWIS 
OXFORD — Service for George 
L. Lewis, 72, of 68 N, Washington 
St., will be held at 2:30 p.m. to- 
morrow at Voorhees-Siple Funeral 
Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in 
the Highland Cemetery. : 
Mr. Lewis died: unexpectedly of 
‘a heart attack yesterday at his 
home. He was a retired electrician 
with Fisher Body Division of Gen- 
eral Motors Corp. , 
Surviving are two daughters, 
Mrs. John Chillicutt of Springtown, 
Tex., and Mrs. M. Evelyn Lewis 
of El Paso, Tex.; two brothers, 
John L. Lewis of Tokyo, Japan, 
and J, Gardner Lewis of Birming- da PRESS,’ MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 
BABY GIRL OLIVER 
SPRINGFIELD. TOWNSHIP — 
Servicé for Baby Girl Oliver, 
of Mr, and Mrs. Nelson 
Oliver, “of 9220 Crosby” Lake .Rd., 
was’ to be held at 11 a.m. today 
at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, 
Milford, with burial in Four Towns 
Cemetery, + v > 
The baby died at birth in Pon-| tiac Osteopathic ‘Hospital Friday. 1959 ’ 
ial will ‘follow in White Chapeljhis mother, Mrs, Marguerite Roye Memorial Cemetery. ia Mr, Roye died Saturday at, Wil- of Hendricks, W. Va.; two. sons, 
liam Beaumont Hospital, Royal E., Jr., of Sewickley; Pa. 
Oak, after a brief illness. He was|and William /A., of Royal Oak; and 
the’ owner of Roye's Grocery Of tive grandchildren, Three brothers the Maple road adress. 
Surviving are his wife,’ Pearl; and two sisers also survive. 
  New Jersey for 26 years, died 
Sunday of a heart attack, She was 
born in Jersey. City,     
    
   
          
      
     Surviving besides her parents 
are a brother, Nelson, at home; 
and grandparents, Mr, and Mrs. 
Lester Oliver and Mr. and Mrs. 
Hefferman Ross, all of Milford. 
HARRY E. ROYE 
TROY — Service for Harry E. 
Roye, 58, of 2067 E, Maple Rd., 
will be held at 2 p.m, tomorrow 
    at Price Funeral Home here. Bur-   
  
    
   
        
    Just Phone 
with RT-98     AVOID THE WINTER RUSH 
For... 
New MOBILHEAT   5 
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\ | A LS 
FE 5-818] 
   
  
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rounding area in one of our 
91 LAKE ST You save lots of money and trouble when you. let 
us také care of your heating now! During summer 
we offer you extra low prices:. REMEMBER A FULL 
TANK OF NEW MOBILWEAT ELIMINATES CON- 
DENSATION AND CORROSION IN YOUR STOR- 
NO MATTER WHERE YOU LIVE ... YOU, TOO 
CAN ENJOY NEW MOBILHEAT FROM GEE 
We can now make delivery anywhere in Pontiac and the sur- 
driven by experienced, competent drivers. . 
    ¢ 
a 
  Order your coal in lead lots 
of two tons er more... 
save $1.50 a ton.- ‘ATTENTION COAL USERS! 
Save $15° A Ton 
    
new modern metered truc 
    3-HOUR SPECIAL! 
    
Open Mon. & Fri. 
Evenings to 9 p.m. 
  6 
  “Rose Royale PATTERN 
14-PC. Fue Cina 
COFFEE \ene 
SERVICE 
    
       
   
    e@ TRANSLUCENT CHINA 
e"ROSE ROYALE” PATTERN 
ELECTRIC QUICK-BREW * TABLE SERVER , COMPLETE WITH CORD ~ ae 
. 4-SAUCE (wy 
* SUGAR wrth COVER AND CREAMER 
FOR MAKING * ee etnT COFFEE. TEA “SET EASILY ORCHOCOLATE RIGHTON 
TH OS THE TABLE WORTH °12.95     
Free Parking 
Behind Store 
108 NORTH SAGINAW 
      a, 
‘"BURGER 
    
BUYS’ 3 MONDAY AND TUESDAY SPECIALS!   
  
       
    
  10-LB. PKG. 
U 
CHUCK ROAST-39: | U 
TENDERAY BRAND BEEF 
Rib 
« a 
* LOW-LOW-LOW 
PRICES 
THE BIG... 
DIFFERENCE 
son: 
STAMPS GROUND “SPECIAL FORMULA” EXCLUSIVE WITH KROGER. 
Ground fresh daily from lean boneless beef rounds and the freshest beef 
trimmings. Guaranteed 80° lean (never more than 20% fat) . . . or your 
money back, 
69: )NUSDA 2         1445 
ye 
S. GOVERNMENT GRADED CHOICE-BLADE CUT 
S. GOVERNMENT GRADED CHOICE 
S-INCH STANDING 
ROAST...... = 89 ES ce RA RE ERY 
| TENDERAY] 
+» » PLUS 
VALUE’ 
  
      
HOT DATED 
WINSTON: 
CIGARETTES A in 99. 
“STILL YOUR BEST. MILK’ VALUE = Homogeniz ed 
BORDEN'S MILK) 5) tims 
ig ch ee 1 it 53° S-KENT'S-PALL MALL: 
* 
Va -Gal. 37¢ 
&       
      
    
      
   
             
     FINEST HOME GROWN—Here’s corn so fresh, so tender that it’s 
bursting with summertime goodness. Kroger selects only the 
plumpest ears—pre-céols them, puts them in waterproof bags and 
smothers them with ice . . . right in the field, so you know it’s 
fresh. Kroger’s “iced in the field” corn reaches you at the peak 
_ of flavor freshness. . | 
{CY 
Tender Kernels — delicate flavor so sunny, se 
‘ sweet, they just beg to be Buttered - 
COUNTRY CLUB ROLL 
BUTTER 
KROGER BAKED 
CINNAMON 1 -LB. 
ROLL     
     
NOONAN Reet    : 
OUT eA: | reserve the right to limit quantities, Prices and items effective thru Tuesday, August 4, 1959, at Kroger in Pontiac Only. . 
m < , ‘ CREAM. 
49: Ue VALUABLE COUPON 
Country Club Ice Cream 
coupon valid Monday and Tuesday, Aug. 3 and 4 at 
Kroger in Pontiac and Drayton Plains only. 
AUN NNONOOOOOONNNANNNADNDDDDDNDANDODNNNDD SS     
       
  Country Club 
ICE 
  VY Gallon Carton 
  with COUPON 
    
        LAAD %. ’. %, LAAAAAAL ’. LAKAKAAK RAD ¢. %, LAD 
  Ne 
   WITH THIS COUPON 
Gallon 
Carton Yo se, 49° NODDDDODNODDDNN 
7 KROGER-RED SOUR PITTED : 
: PIE CHERRIES “2°. 19¢ 
“LIBBY — SAVE 216. | 
¥ ; PINEAPPLE JUICE 32:91  Chain She Carried 
’ Tregoff, 
jl ‘today’ awaiting preliminary 
hearing 
  ltl 
alate 
a 
atl 
ii 
niin 
dae tan 
  
  _TWENTY-FOUR f 
THE, PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1959 es ; 3   
Murder Kit for Finch 
“ “LOS ANGELES (UPD — Carole 
22,. was held in county 
  tomorrow on charges that 
she carried the ‘murder kit” 
society Doctor R. Bernard Finch 
egainst his wife. 
cee was arrested 
* preliminary hearing. The state 
‘oe ieee: pepe rune ss |U. S. Output Shocking of Barbara Finch, 33, 
last July 18 with the hope of later 
said the 41-year-old physician. 
The original murder plot of 
~ injecting a sedative into Mrs.   the back on the lawn of the Finch | 
nned to in a murder plot |$65, home in . nearby «West 
“ es ® oink Miss Lidholm, 19-year- 
The attractive red-haired divor-'old Swedish’ exchange student, 
and charged Said she last saw Mrs. Finch be- 
; with first degree murder last ing chased across the lawn by 
. week after testifying at Finch’s| Finch. 
cent of the world’s total electric 
energy is produced on the U.S. 
mainiand area, ape waster = ae (GM Tests Cars | setpanun systems and other 
Finch meld, Marte Ann Litwoie, OF Road Wear | “tne mide, simulator te ogee 
the vate charged. Ht mid Mis With New Device| fant ttetesrnane mgt on: | kit” containing sedatives, rope 
and hypodermic syringes among 
other things to the seehe. 
Mrs.. Finch was .found shot in 
  
WASHINGTON — About 42 per 
  
q COULD vou STOP IN TIME ; ? 
a at Oe en G 
  
  2. Add 
: Monro-Matic *. 
7 ae x ApSeRemeS Susp mesure 
  
        Inspect broke drums 
. Adjust broke shoes | Ounaena . Test, adjust brakes 
  BE aciecauiall SURE!   COMPLETE CAR 
SAFETY CHECK 
= yi restone = 
Here's what we do: 2 
1. Adjust brakes F 
3. Pack front wheel bearings 
.. 4 Alignfrontend . . oe 
" 5. Balance both front wheels. & 
Faulty shock absorbers 
are extremely DAN- /f 
\ |. GEROUS, and are not & 
\< £ easily detected until it’s 
FIRESTONE MUFFLERS =| 
_ \ Custom engineered for the re- 
quirements of the car they pricep 8s 
are built to fit...the right rom UP 
muffler for your car. fa | 
| 
SAFETY-SER 
Here’s What We Do: 
. Inspect front wheel linings 
. Pack front wheel bearings 
Add brake fuid if needed q 
secmrerPEACE OF MIND ll 
“Firestone 
              ae 
brake fiuid if needed | 
     
   
    
    
BRAKE esis 
             DRIVE WITH - 
      
Saeeith bl | 
      *Sine 670-18, tubed type, plus 
    tows TIRES MOUNTED rsa ee E reset ae ae E 
146 West Huron 
FE 2.9251 fox « your recappoble tire WARREY, Mich. w— General 
Motors is using a new gadget to 
test driving effects pn a car with- 
out taking the-car onto the read. 
‘A-tape recorder and instramen- 
tation transmit the bounces and 
pitches of a rough road ento a   
No Damage Revealed 
nounced. 
  gunfire. TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) — An 
artillery battle broke out near standard car body that stands , 
still, The body has no wheels. — Island at the northern end 
GM calls its development & 
“Ride Simulator.” It was ex- 
plained at GMs technical center 
here today by Robert H. Kohr, 
vehicle dyBamics supervisor of 
the corporations’ research labo- 
ratories, 
Kohr said the simulator pro- 
duces the motions of a car on & Formosa Strait today when 
Communist and Nationalist war- 
ships appeared, the National- 
ist Chinese Defense Ministry an- 
Nationalist warships suffered no 
damage, the ministry said, and it 
claimed no hits on Red warships. 
There was no mention of naval Western Dems Want 
(Convention Vote Bloc 
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico # — 
A campaign to organize a western 
voting bloc in the contest for the 
1960 Democratic presidential nom- 
rage was. disclosed today by 
Gov. Edmund G. (Pat) — of 
California. 
Brown told newsmen at the 5lst 
annual governors conference he 
intends to canvass other Demo- 
cratic governors on their presi- 
in Sun Valley, Idaho, next month. 
Although he denied any inten- 
tien of attempting to. control 
such a Western bloc, Brown 
made it clear he wants Call-         IF duction since record 1955 and said 
ential. preferences at a meeting|it puitt more Thunderbirds during of western state chief éxecutives!,. month than in any previous 
year. In seven months the com- fornia’s 76 convention votes sup- 
plemented with others behind a 
strong candidate. 
Without shutting the door on his 
own possible candidacy, Brown 
said he thinks tlie field is wide! 
open at this time: 
Ford Reports Best. | 
Production Since ‘55 
DETROIT w# — Ford Motor Co. 
today reported its best July pro-   
month since the car was intro- 
duced. 
otal car production for Ford 
was 159,653 against 82,559 last 
  | WORRIED ‘OVER DEBTS? | pany has byllt 1,107,809 cars com- Ford Division’ s figure of 143,516 
paréd w 572 in the January-jcars. ‘ 
July ‘period of 1958. ; 
Thunderbird production in July 
totaled 7,884 and was included in   
  Sweden is 48,000 square miles 
larger than Norway... 
  
  
  , nda Y Gent at tat at Slee \— you ow 
  
NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED _ ONE PLACE TO PAY Member American Association of Credit Counsellors 
      
“Let 14 Years of Credit Counseling Experience Assist You" 
Hours: Daily 9 to 5. Wed. and Sat. 9 to 12 Noon. 
MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS © 716 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. 
  
  
    
    
        
           
  | PRICES SLASHED 
TO COST & BELOW Sorry Not All Left- 
Overs At All Stores 51 S. SAGINAW 
™ YANKEE STORES | 
CLEAN-OUT THEIR SUMMER | NEXT TO 
WRIGLEY'S, 
  
  
| “Women’s Wear Left ‘Overs | [ Lawn-Garden Left-Overs |   
45 LADIES DRESSES Sleeveless and short sleeves. All sizes 
100 WOMEN’S SKIRTS Dan River Wash & Wear. Sizes 10 to 20 ...... 
LADIES SWIM SUITS Price saving closeout of leftovers 
Girls’ Jamaica & Pedal 
Pusher Sets Sixes 7to 14 ...... t cus \ Slall es) eislple e_a'clelep gece 
Girls’ Sleeveless Dresses Sizes 1 to 3. 4 to 6x. Left-over prices at eereeeee x 
] 33 
$37   
  
Ce 
  
00 
qT   
   
              
      
    
    Girls’ Pedal ~ Boys’ & Girls’ 
ee Slim in im Cabana Sets 
Sleeveless 47i° aA sha 66° 
Blouses 3-14, - : 
    
  
  TOTS’ BOXER JEANS 
LA setlgallechta | 1° 
GIRLS’ SWIM SUITS $133 Everglaze cottons —— Sizes 7 to 14 ........... 
4 ¢ 
LL Ley ©   
[MEN'S WEAR LEFT-OVERS |   
  25 MEN’S SUMMER 
DRESS SHIRTS *] 66 . Short sleeve, cool mesh weave. Reg. 2.75 ...... 
48 MEN’S SWIM TRUNKS cad 33 
Boxer-and brief styles. S-M-L, Values te 2.95 .   
35 BOYS’ SWIM TRUNKS Boxer and brief styles. 6 to 16. Values to 1.98 . 
          
    
        
     
  95 MEN’S . 115 MEN’S 
- WASH WEAR | FAMOUS MAKE 
SPORT SHIRTS | SPORT SHIRTS 
Reg. $1.98 c Hes. $2.95 $ 66 
ning. 8 88 “to $3.95 
  
  52 Prs. Men’s Summer Pps Short sleeve, angle length, Reg. 2.95 
75 Men’s Denim Hobby Jeans Bs Le 77 ‘Wash and wear — Tan, blue, green $ te XL... 
13 Men’s Bermuda’ Shorts . 4 17 
Plaid, plains, stripes. Sizes 28 te 42 ©. --+.+--- a" 
ereeve 
  
  4T'| SOME OF THE TASTIEST 
BARGAINS EVER DURING 
OUR LEPT-OVER SALE PLENTY OF FREE PARKING 
OPE TONITE & NJTES ‘til 9 
SUNDAY 9 A. M. to 6   
      
    
        
    
       
           
    HURRY TONIGHT! 
Quantities Are Limited 
$6" Marlite Rigid seabed Pool Or Send Box $10.95 value ee ay 
  
6.96 ROBOT GARDENER KIT $ " Attaches te garden hose and spreads weed kil- 
ler ete. ee ee eee seeeeeea antes e *eeeoeesesene   
CAPE COD PICKET - 
FENCE SECTIONS 3 foot sections painted white .. 21° a a 
  
Adjustable Hose Nozzles shes Site lett ever: peten of =: 27 etree eneeneeee 
  
  60 ft. Better Plastic Hose ] 77 
5 year factory guarantee. just 174 left........ 
kle ¢ 
sche Sogtel oleten! ISS 
$89.95—-24”" Deluxe 
Self-Propelled 
ROTARY 
MOWER | just 14 left-over. 
Compr’sd Air Tank Sp Sprayer For sptaying lawn and garden chemicals. 
  - $16.95 American 
{wan MOWER 16” Cut 
‘$997 Just 9 
left-over 
  
eepevpenee 
  
3.98 6 ft. Patio Torches Chrome finish—keeps insects away ee 
  
60 ft. Rubber Garden Hose $5.95 quality, 110 left-over ... ee ee ey 
  
  
  2.98 Bridgp’t Weed Kill Gun Complete with supply of weed killer 
|Picnic & Backyard Left-Overs} 
WICKER PICNIC BASKET - With hinged cover. just 47 left ever .........- 47 ee 
*] 27 
  
4,96 Insulated Picnic Bag. ‘ Yinyl with scotch plaid ‘design. iy ic Metal fined . 
  
9 3* [Light insulated Ice Chests Now at this low left-over price of «2... ..ee0s 
6.95 Aluminam 
val CHAIRS 
oe dug-O-Matic Pienle dug $977 With sutometic pourlog spout. LA... poor, 
  $ 2” 
Kids’ Picnic 
- Table & Bench 
| SE sgu   
  
Kids’ Backyard Phases Pool 1° 67 
  
1095 Wire Suppo 260 gal. capacity. ae Seen. bi iebee + Pool $Q 88 | 
      
       
2” | VACATION LEFT-OVERS |   
Adult Size Swim Fins Values to 2.98. Now only ee er ery 99° 
18°   
  
  
  
  Now at this low price of ... 2... 2.6. ca lee 
PLASTIC AIR MATTRESS . $1.99 
| LEFT-OVERS for the HOME 
8-Ounce Glass Tumblers 4 Fe: 17° 15¢ size. Heavy base .-................. 
34.95 20” Portabl 
Window Fens lo ns 
  "$9908 
  2.98 Elec. Bug & Fly Killer 2.00 Ee. bag & Fy Kiler 57 
[_BASEBALL LEFT-OVERS | Pees suneaee 
  
  
  24 Only Baseball Gloves ] 99 . Genuine leather .....................0.., i 
Little League Baseba Fine quality mage Wes WKS < ciee a Bais ST   
Wilson Baseman’s Witt $ Fine quality leather. 12.95 Glove 
2.49 Wilson Official Softball 5] 27 
“SHOE LEFT-OVERS a] 
BOYS’ OXFORDS a a 
  
  
  
    
       
Men & Boy’s Black ry 
- TENS" SHOES 
Pe. 99 
White —_ 
       
      FE soe te 
dwene ae    é 
THE PONTIAC, PRESS, ‘MONDAY; AUGUST 3, 105% ¥ 
  
Veteran, 71, Is- Governor-General ©   
French-Canadian Gets High Post MONTREAL @®—Oneé old soldier who didn’t fade away is Canada’s first governor-general of French extraction, 7l-year-old _Maj. - Gen. 
George Philias Vanier. His career as soldier, diplomat and attorney 
speumapaste four decades. 
* * 4 
Although cen Vanier advocated disarmament in the League of Na- 
ons and saw France fall in 1940, 
_ he tried to rouse his fellow French-| 
to war in 194] and Canadians 
served as Canada's envoy to Gén. Charles De Gaulle in London and     
  Algiers. He also was Canada's fitth 
ambassador to France. 
“E wouldn't do anything differ- 
ently if I had my years to do 
again,” Vanier has said. 
Born in. Montreal on April 23, 
1388 — the day Englishmen hon. 
or their patron st, George — 
Vanier learned fluent French 
from his French father and   
  
    
  (4-G-M presents 
AUDREY HEPBURN 
ANTHONY PERKINS 
“GREEN 
MANSIONS” COMEMASCOFE « METROCOLER 
Co tg 
LEE J. COBB   
  
  
25c “TIL 1:00 P. M.   
  TODAY & TU ESDAY 
BENEDICT BOGEAUS paistnts 
TAN ARES NE POEL   
    
MIGHTY 
ADVENTURE 
BY THE AUTHOR OF 
MIGHTY ‘MOBY DICK                  
     acrv 
A Regal Films, ine. Production. Released by 20th Century-Fox   GEN, GEORGE P. VANIER   
|Lost Stream 
Swallows 
Patrolman PHILADELPHIA ® — Is there 
such a thing as a lost stream? 
A tragedy has revealed that 
there is. 
* * * 
It all started Saturday night 
when patrolman Joseph Reiss, 35, 
was checking a reported cave-in 
at a street intersection in north- 
eastern Philadelphia. 
Suddenly the earth below him 
crumbled without warning. He 
was swallowed into a gaping hole 
43 feet deep, 60 feet long, and 60 
feet wide. There has been no trace 
of him since. 
* * we | 
City Water Commissioner Sam- 
uel Baxter said that the cave-in 
was caused by the collapse of an 
ll-foot ‘arch over a_ forgotten 
stream that had been turned into 
a sewer 75 years ago. The area 
has a history of cave-ins but this 
was the worst.   
            | equally excite Bagi from 
“Wedd a ai wee 
tawa to serve as aide-de-camp to 
two governors-general and to mar- 
ry a judge's daughter. 
With the advent of World War 
I, Vanier helped organize the 
famed Roya} 22nd regiment that 
saw long-term duty in the front 
line trenches. He won numerous 
decorations for bravery and was 
wounded twice, the second time 
losing his right leg above the knee. 
x * * ' 
Despite the loss of a leg, Vanier 
was appointed second in command 
of his old regiment after the war 
and went to Geneva as a delegate 
commission of the League of Na- 
tions.» 
His diplomatic career began with 
an appointment as secretary to 
Canada’s high commissioner in 
London in 1931. 
His appointment eight years 
later as Canadian envoy to 
France was soon followed by 
France’s capitulation in 1940. 
Vanier managed to get his wife 
and children to the Bay of Bis- 
cay. where he herded them 
aboard a sardine boat that event- 
ually rendezvoused with a -Brit- 
ish destroyer which took the fam. 
ily to England, 
Returning to Canada as war- 
time commanding officer of the 
{Quebec district, Vanier stumped 
the province, campaigning against 
anti-conscription nationalists 
among French speaking Canadians. 
kt *& * 
Toward the end of the war, he 
served in the London headquarters 
of Gen, De Gaulle’s French com- 
mittee of liberation and moved 
with De Gaulle to Algiers in 1944. 
Twelve days after the liberation 
of Paris, Vanier reassumed his 
duties as ambassador to France. 
He retired in 1953 to take up char- 
itable work in Montreal, 
Vanier has three sons: and a 
daughter living in Europe. A fourth 
son is a trappist monk in Oka, Que. 
  
Marriage. License 
Applications 
ey uM sm ie Sitminghem 
James L. Scott, 21_N. Anderson 
Barbara D. Sahr, T7170 Cameron 
James G. Rowe, Clarkston 
Myrtle Guilds, Clarkston 
r R. Caston. Tro 
Eimer M. Broegman, Birmingham 
Donald O. Ewald, Orion 
Nancy J. Lee, 908 Mt. Clemens 
164 — 
eal Sr "Toot, “123 a. Merrim ac 
  
Gary W. Leidler, Fort Knox, Ky. 
Mary K. Hubble, Oxford to. the preparatory disarmament} |   THE FOUR FRESHMEN ._ 
The Four Freshmen will be the 
attraction at Walled Lake Casino 
Ballroom on Saturday night. The 
Dukes of Dixieland will be the 
feature on Friday night.   
Coveralls Best 
for Tot Scholars 
When Purchasing Fall 
School Wardrobe 
stone. The new student's. experi- 
ences in the nursery or kinder- 
garten classroom are unlike any- 
thing he’s experienced before. 
Mother can make life a lot eas- 
ier and pleasant for the child by 
using just common sense in pur- 
chasing fall garments to start the 
child on his road to learning. 
x « * 
Since children in this age 
group devote a major portion of 
thei? day in play on. the floor 
and with paints and crayons, the 
most appropriate attire for both 
boys and girls is the coverall 
or shirt and slack outfit, Since 
most of these are drip-dry there 
is no laundering problem, 
George Rosenberg advises moth- 
ers to select clothes with elasti- 
cized waistlines to give a com- 
fortable fit. A 
And try to select garments with 
zippers down the front. The little 
folks become more confident when 
they are allowed to dress them- 
selves and find that it is easy to do. 
x 8 * 
Keep in mind not to buy clothes 
that are too big. Not only do they 
make the 
physically but psychologically, too. Keep Comfort in Mind: 
The first day in school is a mile-; 
child uncomfortable WASHINGTON (AP) The 
first man-carrying. type of space 
capsule is scheduled for launch-'hi 
unoccupied, next month. 
It will be sent up from Cape 
Canaveral, Fla., by a vehicle 
called Big Joe, essentially a mod- 
ified Atias -Intercontinental Bal- 
listic Missile. « 
Good Heating   
ital to Schools Comfortable Classroom 
Necessary for Efficient 
Learning 
Although parents tend to judge 
an important role. There is a def- 
inite relationship between comfort 
and learning efficiency. 
Several heating industry organi- 
zations conduct, continuing  re- 
search programs for more facts’ 
about good heating, in the home: 
,as well as the school. 
Proper school heating is now 
a concern of engineers, school 
boards and parents because heat- 
ing is an integral part of school 
construction costs. 
“The rising construction costs are 
reflected in the local taxes paid 
by all homeowners, Thus heating 
in the school involves two ques- 
tions for parents: will it aid stu- 
dent performance and what will 
it cost? 
The hot water heating industry 
is concerned with these questions, 
too. According to the Better Heat- 
ing-Cooling Council, the industry 
recently developed new equipment 
and techniques to reduce school 
heating costs while maintaining 
high standards of performance 
and quality. 
Some new school heating tech- 
niques come from developments 
in the home heating field. 
These include such innovations 
as forced circulation hot water 
heating, baseboard heating panels, 
smaller but more powerful boilers 
(heating plants), use of smaller 
size distribution pipes (as small 
as % inch). 
The principle of increased effi- 
ciency and reduced size has been 
applied to school heating with con- 
siderable savings.   
  
7-Nation Treaty Governs 
Troops in West Germany 
BONN, Germany (AP) — A sev-     Space Capsule for: Man: 
to Be Tested in September 
‘a school in terms of curricula and) 
teaching staff, proper heating plays, ct 
Spain Doubles Rates . 
for Telephone Calls : 
MADRID, Spain (UPI) ~— The 
government announced Friday a 
nearly 100 per cent in the 
cost of telephone calls as part of 
the plan to stabilize the nation's   
The conventional Kites, 7 feet, 
tall, climbs to-altitudes of several 
hundred miles and delivers its 
warhead at speeds of more than 
15,000 miles an hour over a range 
of up to 6,300 miles. 
* * * 
Big Joe, by contrast, will rise 
vertically to about 120 miles, then 
tilt at right angles and slightly 
downward. 
With its mighty engine still put- 
ting out full power, it will thun-! 
der down a slanted course through | 
the earth's thickening atmosphere. 
* * * 
The purpose: a maximum test) 
of the ablation or heat erosion of 
the outer space of the space cap- 
sule’s nose. 
The space capsule atop the At-, 
las in Big Joe has been built SS 
the National Aeronautics and! 
Space Administration at its Lew-’ 
is ‘Laboratories, Cleveland, Ohio. | 
| It is a faithful copy of the 12) 
produced for Nasa by McDonnell 
Aircraft Corp., St. Louis, Mo. 
* * * 
Tt is the same weight — 2,100, 
to 2,200 pounds — and will have 
ithe same instrumentation and / 
|pressurized compartment as the 
‘McDonnell capsule but will not, 
have the environmental equip- 
ment required to keep a ra 
alive. + 
dt may be preceded by Little. 
Joe rocket launchings from Wal-| 
lops Island, Va., of from Cape) 
Canaveral, some carrying rhesus 
monkeys or chimpanzees. 
The Little Joe series will be 
followed next spring by the first 
rocket launchings of men into} 
short flights in space capsules, in 
preparation for eventual orbital, 
flight late in 1961 or in 1962. 
Bridge Bout Shrinks, 
2 Teams Unbeaten 
CHICAGO  — The American 
Contract Bridge League’s annual 
summer tournament today nar- 
rowed to 12 teams, two of them 
undefeated. 
x * 
The two unbeaten teams are 
headed by Oswald Jacoby, of New 
York City, and Lewis Mathe, of. 
Los Angeles. 
The Jacoby team defeated the 
Sidney Silodor squad of Phila- | 
delphia yesterday by 11 inter. | 
national points. Mathe’s team , 
downed the New York City quin- | 
tet of Arthur Miller by 22 inter- 
national points. 
The Jacoby and Mathe teams: 
square off today. Five other 
matches will be played today and, 
tonight among the remaining 10 gp on 
other house turnishings. To inform 
these people of the latest facts re- 
garding new products and servic- 
ing information advertisers — last 
year invested over $3 billion in 
‘daily newspaper advertising. 
NOW! ™ 
All Passes Void 
During This Engagement The monthly. basic rate of 6 
pesetas“($1) was increased by 53 
pesetas. The increase folluwed.| 
other price hikes on gasoliné and     
      
          
          
          
   
       
    
             
        
           
                                     
         
     
       
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
        
  
—~ DONTIAC = 
I eae DRIVE-IN; OS, ag Z nae 
f oh 
    
    
EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWING! 
TWO MAJOR FEATURES! 
Joun WAYNE, Wittinm HOLDEN   
    
  
        lyde R. Kizer, Clarkston 
frasei L. Miller, Waterford 
avid E. Witt. Trov . Secentes A. Matthew, Rochester Most of the outfits made for 
children in this age group are 
popular priced, durable and can en-nation treaty on stationing of; squads, which have one defeat! North Atlantic forces in West Ger- /each. 
many was signed here today. MA 4-3135 DRIVE-IN 
THEATR x * * 
  
  ‘gy LATE road STARTS 
T 10:15 
STEWART GRANGER 
IN   
  
  
       
        
      
    Pree: toe 7 Oxted urday of the boss who fired him. 24 Sho Start 
18 Bolden’s employer, Leo S. Rovin,! ws Anthony C. Fernand Esther . Carolyn Lega. 814 Monticello furniture store owner, died after a at 7:00 & 9:10 Kevort W Kasarfian. & Soring Harbor jreported altercation with Bolden, | 
rest. ite his delivery driver whom he had| ADULTS 
— = [perso R, Daigo: gerd: Keego Harbor discharged. - * - | 70¢ 
~ NOUR | \ Butterfield Theatres| edt yee ie bee a Macomb County Coroner Stanley oo. REN wv w Gerald 8. Genet. Farminet K. Schultz said an autopsy showed ic VV VT VV 
& EE rare Ex? +> ee JoAnn C. Tucker, Farmington that Rovin died of a heart attack. 
Prices for this Attraction   PHONE FEDFA AL 2 4851 
OAKLAND: MODERNLY AIR CONDITIONED 
WALT DISNEY’S 
“GRAND      Features At 
1:40, 3:40, 5:40, 
  
        Leseececeseerenieseersersenend 
  
  
  
        
  
    
     
      
  
      Frederick A. Raible. Orchard Lake 
Rosalie Hall. 0 rd Lake 
Thomas E. Weber. 108 Hudson 
Shelby M. Hahn, 113 Hudson 
Richard ¥ rontz, Ferndale 
" Patricia J * Hart Clarkston 
mald C. Arhold, Lansing Rs osalind A. Latham. Birmingham 
Donald L. Johneon, 3400 Mann 
Lois L. Ruffner, Rochester 
Harry L. White, Roval Oak 
Dawn E. French, Birmingham 
sexed J. Arold, Detroit 
Frances E. Fortner, Farmington 
give west E. Zellers. Orion 
R. Shafor, Royal Oak 
Larry R. Rickard. 705 S. Cass Lake 
Virginia J. Everett, 557 Lowell 
Roger K. Duddles. 25 FE. Ann Arbor 
Marsha J. Wolff. 3916 Gregory 
Rurton Tavior. Dravton Plains 
Tiene M. Hustin, 7 Prall 
“ Richard H. Hoover. Ortonville 
Chartotte F. Newcombe. 126 EF. Oxford 
Frank Lhe 168 EF Pike 
Dorothy J. White, 57 Mechanie 
Johan O.. Gavelin. Birmingham 
Carolyn Nilson, Birmingham 
Lynn R. Creith Commerc Jeraldine V. eacgerat “commerce 
Robert E. Mathews 82 N. Johnson 
  
One Dead, Two Missing 
in Fire in Wild Gas Well 
HOUMA, La. (AP)—Oil crews 
today tried to choke out a fire child gives them right through a 
season. 
Once the child does not feel 
restrained in his clothes or fear- 
ful of soiling them, he is off to 
a healthy and happy start at 
school, 
Will Charge Driver 
With Murder of Boss 
WARREN ® — Police today ; 
recommended a_ second degree, 
murder warrant against James! 
Bolden, 46, held in the death Sat-!   
Detective Sgt. Walter O’Bee said 
induced by blows. 
  
Second Explosion Hits 
Home of Negro Couple Mary E. Walther. 62 N. Johnson ; 
—, N, Helsel. Palate WILMINGTON, Del. (AP)—The Joan D. Vore. 261 Osm home of the only Negro couple in 
the formerly all-white suburb of 
Collins Park has been hit by an 
explosion for the second time in 
less than five months. 
The latest explosion Sunday 
buckled the walls and tore a large 
      
       
      
      stand the rough wear the average 
the heart attack could have been: Four thick documents,. which 
have taken 312 years to negotiate, 
set down in detail every condition 
governing the stay in West Ger- 
many of NATO troops. 
The pact was signed by the West 
German deputy foreign minister, 
Hilger von Scherpenberg and the 
ambassadors of the United States, 
Britain, France, the Netherlands, 
Belgium and Canada — the coun-' 
tries whose troops are in Ger- 
many.             A team defeated twice is elim- 
inated from the contest. 
The winning team in the blue 
ribbon competition will repre- 
sent the United States at the 
bridge Olympiad in Rome, Italy, 
next April. Seventeen other coun- 
tries will be represented. 
The bridge league’s summer 
tournament began July 25 with 88 
teams. The team averages five or. 
six Players. 
           
      THE Horse SOLDIERS 
pene ey ap peepee 
SUSPENSE! TERRIFYING!     
      
          
    
  
thru 
Fal. |NO   
  
                  
  
  
ipdialiary PONTIAC 
THURSDAY ; : DRIVE IN THEATER 
2435 
rUVvCVvVCVCCCVCUCU.      
  Dinic Hwy FE ) 4500 
      
  
  
BLUE SKY DRIVE-IN THEATER 
10 Opdyke Rd FE 4-46! 
  
   
   
       
   
   
        
    — TONIGHT — The | Box Office Open 7 P.M. 
Show Starts 8:20 P.M. ata 
  
     
  
    
      
    
      
       
  
           
              
  a a a m7 a a 
a ‘ 
DOORS hole in the front of the $13,500 ~ mans | 
. 31.00 9 burning in a gas well that blewj|home of Mr. and Mrs. George : . a i , chbsiee be <a yises CANYON . OPEN AT. out of control, wrecking a big drill|Rayfield. They were not at home HOW WOULO s. pp *. ] a —- | = 12:45 ng valued at some 1% million'at the time. a a YOU LIKE {TS ct! — yy anda = | ~ ars. | * x = ToBETHE | -. ‘ A e | op it | One man was killed, two are} State police said the house and|® FATHER OFA \) a lil be waiting - , STARTS FRIDAY! missing and presumed dead, and its furnishings are a complete Ml tad Ava per es + womans ee 14 HEPB | five were badly burned. |loss. The National Assn. for the/& sueeppoe ? i a secret | when I'm ‘ AUDRE URN The men were on a barge and/Advancement of Colored People a = | | 
: a tugboat attempting. to salvage|said it would help pay for recon- | e . hunger : m FRED Alinta hs © reooucrion the sinking drill rig when the wild|struction of the house if the Ray-\m a ie THE NUN Ss STORY well spewed forth. fields could not afford it. a % . | 
PETER FINCH TECHNICOLOR® PTTL TILIIrirri irri rr iri 4 a | [ DAME EDITH EVANS DAME PEGGY ASHCROFT DEAN JAGGER wm mL ORED OUNNOCK ~ - . s | 
! | = — =a A onmow! SGD Y NOW! STRAND Open 10:45] m SOUTH END OF UNION LAKE RD. EM 3.0661 mm MacMURRAY-Jean HAGEN ffs Regular Prices fiers RA eos aed 25c to 1:00 | 8 NOW SHOWING ADULTS 8c wm " “THE ROBE” 11:25 - 3:45 - 8:00 P.M. _|s ‘ Nod een eed - “GLADIATORS” 1:40 - 5:55 - 10:15 P.M. a wees af - | T] - , 
* A a an . ) an ae = a8 . ae La 
a : * ‘DEMETRIUS ond = r} a m9 diators’ * S (sonny) MENCHANY PAmES CaMmOT se acceTi® | El FEM SMITH AEN OMT: my ns sn an SCN | a DURING THIS ENGAGEMENT : CASEY ROBINSON / HENRY ING / EDWARD Mi MUL (Fee 000 CORNELL Sag an A WnrERa qrremmcrone mene? — A WRTAGE PapOUETON Te os : 
Tt nef Sasuesseesansensuenensesesenanacus: — Te | \ iL ‘ _\F ry 
a inatinas ree =<" work \ ;a8 | : Js anus . . | ; ; ; ; ' ; ; : ies 
: : TWENTY-SIX a . ie . THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST B, 1959 - 3 - — —__— —— aa 
1959 Stock Rapidly Dropping | } + ama, 4 Te) [ ustenwn's FoR 1OLS : - , an MAPS, * 
> GM May Move Up ’60 Car Work By JACK VANDENBERG ithe Plymouth plant at Evansville, year ago, despite the earlier shut-,a daily rate of 17,100 compared 
ETRO General 1506 tnoaal procection eas Wat!’ Prodestioy far’ the $e te ne ee ee ee oo 11 P op for year to date : 
- ae? ue plant will complete the 1959 model|/now totals 4,610,777, compared|*""* period ¢ year ago 
of’ its 1960 model cars a week or|Tun early next week. Studebaker-|with 3,091,357 at the same time a) General Motors accounted for 
10 days because of rapidly dwin-|Packard also is shut down for mod-/year ago. 46.4 per cent of the industry's 
. @ing stocks of 1959 models, auto’! changeover. ; , kt ok —_ —— Ford 
industry sources said today. | American Motors and Buick | Despite the upsurge in sales this 13.7 per pay poe A ibe M en 
But the industry appeared to be, will begin the changeover of ma- week, sales during July were! 4 par | conl | Gnd | Sakhalin! right on target with its production, chinery for 1960 model produc- jtrailing 19 per cent behind June Packard 2.5 per cent 
schedules and sales as it prepared tion next week. Other preducers sales and the industry expects this = * ; 
for closing out the 1959 models and) were gradually reducing their |margin to widen just a little more) Although current production 
bringing in the 1960 cars. work week in preparation for when the sales figures for the final|rates indicated an annual rate of 
The industry’s sales during the Closing out 1959 model produc: |10 days of the month come in. 6,135,000, introduction of smaller 
second. 10 days of July climbed  "2- JUST A NORMAL DROP 1960 models, coupled with the good 
32.7 per cent above the first 10; =. - es & ‘| Sales normally drop off toward showing of American Motors and days of the month but were still | During the week, the industry|the end of the model year and Studebaker-Packard in the small 
well below the similar period of + rned ot 142,851 cars and trucks sales this year were still well car field currently, was expected June. This was exactly the way compared with 149,565-last week above last year. During the July|to boost this ‘figure in the final the industry had it figured. ‘and 79,122 in the same week a/11-20 period this year cars sold at months of the year. 
Car and = truck production) > 
dropped off 4.5 per cent this week) . BOARDING HOUSE : | from the previous week but again’ 
1 it was a planned drop. . lf Fey on 
) The automak ‘ 4 HOLD IT! U6-AWK: 
pee Sa oe VA nie stones) asinvon SHA) They want to keep a big eno A SWALLOWED MORE} EN, WE'RE GOING inventory of 1959 models so cus- 4 WATER THAN A as <ULP/; I FEEL 
CHANNEL SWIMMER } 7 LIKE A CANDLE 
IN A RAIN STORM! 4 THATS BEEN i tomers can get the cars they want ‘ but keep stocks low enough so 
LIKE. THISLE FIX 4 | Gok; HE'S TRYING “ff BURNED AT BOTH COLONEL HIPPLE A TO SPEAK!/ | ENDS/AND WHOIS there aren’t many 1959 models left 
around the showrooms when the 
RIGHT UPL Z| “THIS STRANGE é a |\ ~ {WATER BEARER 2 1960 models start moving in. 
All Chrysler Corp. plants except 
LVE NEVER SEEN 
HIM BEFORE!   lead te 
     
  
          
  
    
  
            
  
     
     
     
      
       
     
   
    
    
    
    DEMPSEY DIDN'T 
MEAN HIM NO 
HARM~HE'S JOST, 
SORTA PLAYFLIL             
      
       
      
          
     
   
        
     
  
   
    _” Lear Ready to Top 
All in Grand Rapids 
GRAND RAPIDS (AP) — Leaf.. 
Inc., now Grand Rapids’ second- 
largest employer with more than 
3,700 -workers, soon may be in 
first position, William P. Lear,| 
} Lear said at'a press conference 
that the company’s steadily in- 
' creasing business in both military 
and commercial fields could dou- 
bie’ facilities and production at its 
new airport plant here within five, 
years. 
American Seating Co.. special- 
izing in school and church furni- 
ture, now is Grand Rapids’ largest <° 
) employer with approximately 4,000 SDON'T You 
workers. REMEMBER, ‘ % 
a kee acs somos dco » MASOR = © 1900 by WEA Serving, na, TA, og. US. Pat. OM. K| 
Sr with a allay. ood cepa: OUT OUR WAY to have a 90-million-dollar back- 
log by dan. 1. 
The outlook for 1960, he added, is , 
promising and by 1962 his com- ee 
pany should be doing business in =<(\)= 7 
excess of 100 million dollars a =i _[%* . 
year, with commercial work ex- 31 Fi= & = 
panding to 30 per -ent. pt) eh = 
Discussing new developments, | <> -- 
said the company has men in its 
Grand Rapids and California 
laboratories working on a flight 
control systém for a nuclear- 
powered airplane now in early 
stages, and also working in a field 
of solid state physics expected to 
produce a flat plate television 
screen within three years. 
He indicated the solid state 
physics products are being built 
in Grand Rapids. 
Lear is a manufacturer of auto-| 
matic flight control systems, such 
as automatic pilots, and other 
guidance systems. ~ 
One Loss, One Gain 
DETROIT #®—The Detroit De- 
partment of Street Railways said 
Friday it lost 477,469 passengers 
in the first 27 days of its new 
fare increase. The DSR ‘raised bus 
: fares from 20 cents to 25 cents. 
ts General Manager Leo J. Nowicki 
” said the passenger loss was 5.27 
per cent, but that fare revenue in- 
creased 11.48 per cent in the same 
period. 2 ?         
  
            
    and Strieber DIXIE DUGAN 
en ml Sate VS ees [=i   
Regt ~ BEFORE WE GO ANY PLACE \ ON A SUBJ 
1 WANT YOU TO GET ONE THING }, 
PAL ah Tt GOING -- ‘ 
BEA PLE gf 
  SS = ak 
  
    
        
      
  
      
        
   
  AIN'T THEY 
BEAUTIFUL? 
DID YOU 
EVER SEE 
PRETTIER 
HORSES?   
  
        
  —= ALLEY OOP 
      
      
      
  
     
            
APTAIN EASY 
.- &. oo t THAT'S: A CHANCE WB Ss MAY BB CHARGED TAKE, SENOR! MAY NOT RECOGNIZE 
ME! ANYWAY, yes   
  
      Ps 
       aS SS... 
MOMENTS WE’D LIK         
     
      
   
          
    
  
    
7 By Ernie Bushmiller 
Vey Boop tase || SEZ EVERYBODY )y -y | IN MUSIC * A — NANCY   : ‘DONALD DUCK 
      
  
  
PLAY NUMBER TEN---THATS 
MY FAvoRITE                           eeeeeee 
JUKE __f * ie 
Box \   
        
  § fe OF. ~ A ae peered 195% by Uaned Meamere byadbeate, tee.   
          
              
By Dick Cavalli ‘     
  
  LE on. HE DION'T 00 
1T ON PURPOSE.     THE GIRLS 
       
  
~ You'll Find 
por real PROFITABLE 
chewing OPPORTUNITIES $ ° ° 
atisiaction Every Day in the Pontiac 
@ sure it's Press Want Ad Section 
: Take advantage ot this easy way 
S to solve your buying and 
selling problems. 
SPEARMINT To Place Your | 
America’s Favorite. WANT AD a DIAL FE 2-8181         © 1950 by WEA Service. ho. TM Reg US Par 
  
  
                
By Charles Kuhn 
... FROM ONE LANDI [FO MeN NS   
         
      
       
                       
To Aid ‘Dry’ Alcoholics 
JACKSON, Miss. (UPI) —A 
division of thé State Education 
Board is sponsor for a five-day 
gonference, opening today, on 
means of helping Mississippi 
alcoholics. Miaaiastppi is legally 
dry. 
      
STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Pro- bate Court for Count 
a Gs cece a matter o e titio: - Oanee Dawe. rein. ves i tion, concern. 
re Ten ste Kelly Sebofiene. mother of 
“tition having been filed in this Court ng that the present where- abouts o e mother of said minor child are unknown - the said child has violated a law of the State: and that 
on under the 
= = le = the 
e here - 
tified that the hesring on said petition 
held at the a rene) 
ofan ae to make personal 
this summons and no- 
tice shall be served by publication of a 
copy one week previous to said hearing 
in The ntiac Press, a newspaper 
printed and circulated in said County. 
Witness, the Honorable Arthur & 
Moore, a in the 
City of Pontiac in Basan this 31st 
ah of July, A.D 
wees E. MOORE, 
a cee copy) Judge of Probate 
ELSIE J. VASCASSENNO. 
Probate Register 
Juvenile Division 
August 3, 59.   
STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Pro- 
bate Court for = County of Oakland, 
Juvenile Divisio: 
In the matter of the petition con- 
cerning Richard Scott Anderson, minor. 
Cause No. 16532. 
ae Harold Anderson, father of said 
Petition having been filed in this 
court £ sigue that the present where- 
abouts e father of said minor 
child are unknown and said child is 
dependent upon the publie for support, 
and that said child should be placed 
under the jurisdiction of this Court. 
In the- name of the people of the 
State of Michigan, you are hereby no- 
tified that the hearing on said petition 
will be held at the Oakland yee 
Service Center, Court House 
1260B West Bivd.. 
él 1959, at nine o'clock in 
the forenoon. and you are hereby com- 
manded to appear personally at said 
hearing. 
It being impractical to make personal | 
service hereof, this summons and notice 
shall be served by publication of a cons 
one week previous to sald aes 
The Pontiac Press, a mewevepes printed 
and circulated in said Count 
yore E. 
Moore, Judge of said Court, in—the 
City of Pentiee tn vd Célinty, this 30th 
day'of July A.D. 
ARTHUR E. MOORE, (Seal) 
(A true copy) of ie 
ELSIE J. UASEASSE NO, 
robate Weniavee: 
Serene Division 
August 3, ‘59 Witness, the Honorable 
  
  
  2 
PLENTY OF ROOM FOR ALL — An aerial view of Pontiac ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. AUGUST 3, 1959 : ; F} al | , 
ae 
Lake Beach emphasizes the spaciousness of the faeility for Oak- 
land County residents wishing to escape the scorching summer 
heat. The beach in Waterford Township has parking facilities for more than 1,500 cars. Between the parking lot and the water is 
a recreation area complete with swings and slides for the kiddies, 
and picnic tables for outdoor gourmets. The sandy beach, one of 
the finest in Michigan, is long enough to accommodate the thou- 
      
Exclusive Pontise Press 
sands who go there seeking relief from the heat and fora cool, 
refreshing swim. 
i s 
Aerial Phete 
  
  Market Rises 
to New Record iMarket by growers and sold by 
  STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Pro- bate Court for the 
Juvenile Division. 
n the matter of the petition con-/ 
cerning Diana Lynn and Linda Kay) 
Allen, minors. Cause No. 16808. 
To Gerald D. Allen, father of said] 
children. 
Petition having been filed in this | 
  
  
    
  
  
    
  
     NEW YORK (®—Oils and motors 
County of Oakland, paced a further stock market rise! Quotations are furnished by the 
into record high ground’ early, 
today. Trading was fairly active. 
Gains of leading issues ran from 
jfractions to about a point. Most 
  
        
  | MARKETS | 
      
The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown 
produce brought to the Farmer’s 
jthem in wholesale package lots. 
Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of| 
Friday. 
Detroit Produce 
    Most Grain 
Down Slightly CHICAGO  — Grain futures! 
dealers bore down on soybeans. 
again today and that commodity 
declined a cent or more a bushe! 
during the first severa] minutes of 
dealings on the Board of Trade. 
  
          
     
    
        
  
  
    
    
  
      
  
  Army Resumes 
| Struction weapons, contending that 
.|keynote at the outset of the three- Weapons Fight Opposes Too Much 
Reliance on the Mass 
Destruction Types 
WASHINGTON —The Army re- 
newed today its campaign against 
too great a reliance on mass de- 
properly equipped land forces can 
conquer without destroying an en- 
emy. . 
Gen, Lyman L. Lemnitzer, Ar- 
my chief of staff, sounded this 
          |Secretary of Labor Dubious | # 
ATE OF NEW YORK hig 
£0 ~ OF ONONDAGA 
|DONAL J. STAMBAUGH, 
"vag 
fay, Yor Gout f dan e 
i fey. of ‘July, 1 and 
a {fice 
af t ounty of Onondaga 
New York. 
Dated; Syracuse, N.Y. TWESTY-SEVEN 
  
  the Clerk 
at Syracuse, 
— 
duly 15th, 1959 
Yours. 
~ ‘MANHEIM, 
Attorney tor ae aac 
Office an O. Address 
600 —_ "bid cat 
ew 
July 30 at 27, Aug. 3. 10, 17, 24. °s®. 
— NATIONAL BANK 
PONTIAC   
posts Michigan 
NOTICE OF SHAREHOLDERS MEETING 
Notice is hereby given that, pursuant 
= call of its directors, a special meet- 
ing of the shareholders of Community 
Nationa) Bank of Pontiac gfe held 
Sag- 
naw Street, in the City of Pon 
State of se Se on Saturday. August 
22nd. 1959, at 10:00 a.m.; for the purpose 
of considering and determining 
-whether an agreement to merge 
said bank and the Romeo Savings Bank, 
ated in the Village of Romeo, State 
of Michigan. = yo provisions of the laws of the United States, shall be 
ratified and Seefrmee: and for the pur- 
pose of voting upon any other matter 
Incidental to the prescees pple of the 
Lich banks. A_ cop the aforesaid 
Ant execu 
idin: 
rine tenk and may be Gasenad’ dur- 
ing art perry hours. 
uy A. G. GIRARD, ieee 
cana 3i 20. 21, 22. 23. 24, 25, 27, 28. 29, 
1, 3 4 5. 6 7. 8 10. 11, 12, 13, 
17, ry and 19, ‘59. 30 
SE   
7 20 3579732— C BALE 
LIC 
At 9:00 AM. on as ust 10, 1959 a 1953 
Dodge Sta. Wgn., 1 number 38504713 
will be sold at Sablic. sale at 22500 Wood- 
ward Ave., Ferndale, Mich., that address 
    
NEW YORK (AP) In the 
wake of a sharp public rebuke by 
Secretary of Labor James P. Mit- 
chell, industry and union negotia- 
tors today hold their second joint 
session since the nationwide steel 
strike began July 15 
Today's meeting had been ar- 
ranged by federal mediators be- 
fore Mitchell accused both sides 
of failing to make serious efforts 
to settle their contract dispute. 
x * * 
Mitchel] noted in Washington 
Saturday that the negotiators had 
  
      
  
            
  
    
  
                      : } r Negotiators Set 2nd Joints 
Session in Steel Strike 
“This is no way to bargain,” 
said Mitchell, who is serving as, 
President Eisenhower’ s fact-find- 
er in the strike. ‘They cannot 
reach agreement unless they talk 
to each other." 
* * * 
Spokesmen for the industry and 
of America denied they were not! 
trying to reach agreement. They 
did not offer to alter their posi- 
|tions in the deadlock. | 
The industry called .a news con-| 
ference today — two hours before 
the joint bargaining session — in 
  
        
  being where sol vehicle is stored and 
ct 
———— August 3, 4, 1958   
3612913—10 
PUBLIC SALE 
Ql 1958, AB 
u weal by ayn ire = be ublic sa. 
x ard Ave.. Ferndale. ste 
that inadrees being mbere pe vehicle’ is 
tored and may be inspecte 
\* ° y OT hagint 3. 4, 1959 
| - aml {   
  
| 
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        abouts “of the father of’ sald. children [aevances were modest. Reports of weekend rainfall hadj/qay annual convention of the As-|™et just once—and for only two)a move to support its contention OS ice eng said children are de- * * * FRUITS . {a general weakening effect on the sociation of the United States Ar-|nours — last Monday. that an ‘increase in steel labor e @ public for suppor » - : 
é P Apples, Dutchess, bu. ........+0000+.82-73 | orai costs would spur inflation. nd that said children should be placed] The market took off with anlapbies, Red Bitd, bw .71......225.°3 35 8Tains, too, although rye moved/my. The group is composed of o Oe ain, the aame of the people of the tive opening from Friday's record Apples, Soe BU, ccecsee ee 3.28|up small fractions. Corn eased present and former Army men and Indust ke id tha titted that the nesting. on said petition peak. The ticker tape was late | Blueberries, No. 1, 52 (pts: 2). ce0 3.75/small fractions but receipts were other backers of amy policies: local Bank Ranks ndustry spokesmen said that at} Wil be held at the Oakland County |briefly. Trading tapered off to a/Santaloupes, bu... .. veses+-+- 6.50/a bit heavier than they had been xk * the luncheon they would make) Service Center, Court House Annex, Peaches, Red Haven, Bu steerer: - £.50) public ‘thousands of letters’ su 60 B West Bivd, in the City of Pon.|Moderate pace after the ticker Fears, Clapp’, bu. ............. 390] ‘recently the brokers said they ap-| The general also reetnighiaa ’ aan ma nflati t P| tiaa te sald County, on the 1sth day ofitape caught up with transactions. |Respoerrise Ned, ii as. “seseeses 838 parently had relieved some of the|another point the Army long has No 215 Nationall po the anti-inflation conten-, . : Watermelon, bu. .........+ssse0..0- 3.00 ibili . tion, The letters were written in . forenoon, and you are hereby com- cash dealer demand. made, the possibility of a nuclear eaneed to sppear personally at said f "TOR K__Si d of,response to a recent industry ad-) Every home buyer has fire insur- hea N Soybean prices have been stalemate arising when both the} NEW YORK-—Since the end of, ae é | - 
ee i, tmp “this summons’ cad. ne. ew York Stocks Wa bobbing up and down over a |United States and the Soviet Union/1958 Community National Bank in| Vertisement in newspapers. ance—every home buyer should tice shall be Served by publication of a L Beaus. green, flat, bu. ...........82.25 could totally destroy each other|Pontiac gained 31 positions to aj Today's joint negotiations were] have mortgage insurance. For (Late Morning Quotations) Beans, green, round, bu. ............ 2.26) range of about a cent for more is’ The Ponting Pees an cee ae ft Beans, Ky. Wonders, bu. i ee r with those weapons. rank of No. 275 in size, as meas-|arranged last week by Joseph F. 1 hile one home is burning, four printed and circulated in said County | er Gecimal point are eighths/peans’ oman, bu. “71 359) than a week in mistly specula- Lemnitzer said: that ‘‘a modern|ured by deposits, amon? the ne-|F innegen, director of the Federal) ; ne “yaivitness, | the Honorable Arthur.) Admiral 203 Isl Crk Coal .. 39 |Beans. wax. bu. =a - 2.50) tive trade but today they ap- ble of rae b rted today Mediation and Conciliation Serv-\] teen home buyers are dying Moore, Judge of said Court. in the City| Air Reduc 87.2 Johns Man . || §71/2¢et® tovpea : 195 red to be following a weaker |2"™Y is capable of conquering tion's banks, it was reporte ay ue * 
of duly AD 1908, oun: this 30th a Allis ‘chat ...'33 one an oe as Bite Fo e°4,20 Treas 240 aioe ¢ lor woyhen 7 and soy. |“ithout destroying, of defending)by the “American Banker,” the| ice. Finnegan has been meeting] before the mortgage is paid. If of Ju s Chal .... x : ° . : . ; (Sealy ARTHUR E. MOORE. | Alum Lid 373 Kelsey’ Hay. 40 Cabbage, BU. ooo teeees 200! bean Teal. ase Y | without reducing the defended land|daily newspaper of banking, in its’ bee ag i wee be-, you're paying for your home, A true copy) es Hues le Probate Alcoa 3 Kennecott a area Cui WR cece fore. 1 sey : to radioactive waste.” midyear tabulations as of June 30, ee an aa ast N arid s joint, wat lliwanttellnow about (ale Probate. Rerister pees Kresge, 88 --. 34.3 icoeeeee Spreste; 2 el He’added that ‘‘the physical pres-|1959, of the largest banks in the|‘@4S, which he arrange . ( Virginie’ ed August 3. '59/ nm cat Ck eg LOF Olen... 79. 0.3/ Carrots. doz. reehs soosoacaucooane" 322 Grain Prices ‘ence of armed men on the ground/U. S. and in the Free World. of Virginia s mortgage redemp- = ae: we ie shesncoecdccbosean ae 3 i - a, . . . NOTICE OF BPSCIAL ELECTIO Am N Gas |. 623 ties kas << dis Gelecy. oadeat 36 dz: sieeseteiee: 2a can exert more effective and last-} michigan banks in this veritable Que M ki J tion plan. Let me tell you about P Am Smelt 44.6 Lig y : : ; en ary’ Ss ipper 
of the ‘Rrurreaa gener be that ‘par Am Tol be Te eT eee ane 17 st iGorn’ sweet $edor. 2... lol Pgs) CHICAGO. Aug. ShIAP) eee ing control than the threat of mega-|«Biye Book’? of banking are listed! it; it’s available at small cost. Cc : : 5 ee ee ee | ' = 
within’ Pontiac Townthip.  Oskian Smcate an pone 8 Cem .. 32 ; Cucumbers, gill Fancy . Seccem sien e ay HE oars (New Type) tons = firepower that may never according to size, as méasured by|Dies in Southampton coon Michigan: nac W&C ... 56.6 ne as .. ;jCucumbers, Pickle. - 6.50, “'be used.” oa j 
otice i ‘* 7g'g Lorillard . 44.6: Cucumbers, slicers. Fancy. bu. .... 2.95| De . . _.|deposits: Election will be held on Tuesday. Rusust| Armoure'& Co ai} Lou & Nash |. 83" Dildos. behs sonteesenenses 100)) «| At another point, Lemnitzer said| 13 national Bank of Detroit 1,798,761.472|,, SOUTHAMPTON, England  — 18. 1959 at the Fire Hall on Auburn| Atchison ..... 20.6 Mack Trk .... 46 |Eespiant, 4) bu. Lo... sone faenne 2.75 that in th t too distant futu 24 Detroit Bank & Trust Co. 867.440,012,Capt. Andrew MackKellar, master, RO R Road in Auburn Heights, to establish a| Avco Corp .. 14.4 Manning ..... 29.2/Eggplant, Long type, pk. ........... 1.50) at in the not too distant re, 3 Manufacturers cle 440, ’ Special Assessment District for the pur-| Balt (e) 46.6 plo Co ... 49.2) Kohlirabi. doe Ochs. ...0..ce.se00. ¢.50 bi t intercontinental ballistic missiles "768.864.8607 of the liner Queen Mary, died iast pose of levving costs of installings sewer| Beth Steel .... $7.1 May D Str ... 49.3 Leeks, dos., Rena sees po ceeeecnes iy) Rath a F188 Dee ee PST la-| 51 Michigas National Bank, ‘__"___|night in Southampton General Hos- 1080 W. Huron St. extension to Evergreen Interceptor to Bond. strs vee boi rong Ce oo = Okra, pk. st accocsenens 230, Mar. Bob oe . Liz ce SHE rani can become so numerous and rela- Ti nee 481,687,293 pital, He was 62 | cee, meee) Downap tn Meld) persee 88 Mort Che O18 Onions, geen, den. ag SA pre Liite May i. 13649 | tvely invulnerable to counterat- % Bank of the “Common- asthe "4g | FE 2-0219 Notice relative to opening and closing | Bore Wan -.. $7.8 Mle Hon ear fang (parsley. curly, dow. bens. ...-..0006 10 oats (Old Type Sep. ........ 877Bitack that it would senseless for an/123 Oia Kent B&T ‘oo. murs MacKellar had been under treat-| rele pole. ga st , <n Briss My Uo ee a Gale SE holes y arte 60. Sel casinos ‘2 boperse ens Nov. °'..'''' goa jenemy to attempt surprise attack. Grand Rapids oo 229,612,455;ment at the hospital since June 
o'clock ‘in’ the forenoon “and shall. be| Bran Balke -.1004 Monsen Ch’... 553'peppere: hot bus.” 2.25 Dec) cccec O37 | fend er, primarily repre-|'"? gittzene Somi & 57.465,364,When he became ill during a gq continued open until 8 o'clock in the| BuadCo. 3 Mont Ward ©:. 49. : 350 power, Pi y rep ee eee: Sfterneen and no longer. Every walified | Ger Pare 11: 357 Mot Prod ..:. 60, toe: 1.60 e sented by the Army, is vital in/!7 Michigan Bank. 147,889.1771| 0 a8e- : elector present and in line at the polls | Gat gree 3 Mot Wheel Radishes, red, doz. . selsss 3.00 . ° l 1 198 oar Ba eres 138,452,975 ii j THE LIFE at the hour prescribed for the closing Gampb Soup |, 53 Motorola ....124 |Radishes, white, dom. ......s..2s... 1.00 strategy, the general declared. 214 Genesee Merchants Bank " He joined. the Cunard Line in) SURANCE COMPA thereof shall allowed to vote. n Dry oe Gee 20.6 ohet pence 29 za Rhuharb outdoor svoveceee 90 @ pecia ee ing & Trust Co., Flint 123,416,190| 1924, and was given command of ‘ rid GRETA V. BLOCK, |Cdn Pac... 99.2 Nat Cash R .. 69 \eauash. Acorn, M% bU. .......000.. 250 a1 Secena Navi Be ah Tr. ; OF VIRGINIA Township Clerk| Capital Aint .. 187 Nat Dairy ... 52.5) Scussh: Butternut 3 Moa, SITTIN 250 . C. t DAV Co. Saginaw we. pe.sseis9/the passenger Jiner Ascania in fi August 3, 4, 'S9. ae o- 33 Nat Lead p77 1322 quash, Delicious. % DU. wevcecveee ‘c of Board of Education oun y 275 Community National sa isseee 1950. He was the master of the [SINCE 1871 © MiCHMOND. ViNGiNA A ms ve Quas. eee eeeeesetess nn. cee estes y uret: , 
Notice ts hereby given of « public b Chee & On 2.114 Nort, & West at eg Doe cel £88 El t ib ] K e -|oon md en eee ee er vi - a * Aes 5 i: * eeseoersan b. — 
in to. be held at ‘the Waterford ° own. Chrysier ..... 68.3 Nor Pac ... 55.3)Tomatoes, outdoors, 14 Ibs. sseese.. 1.00 ec Ss srs * ys ; comma the Queen Mary last anfp Hall, 4995 West Huron St, Water- ao ee Nor Se PW .. 23 |Turnips, ‘topped, Du. ............ 160] A special Waterford Township p th Not ce August. tpan from tee beats a Te eae: eoicoal Soe Palm ALT lens gee pped bu. vs. s-r+s+s20000+ 280 Board of Education meeting has; Ommander €d I union of creating anetor Netlog oee/Ee OG, HY Bae SRY —— dey whit toateoctig” etipioves 3 sled lighting certain, pub- Consumers’ Pw 33 Penh Epi... eaiGonenke hen fe BM cccerscecsertes SL S8 day with non-teaching employes The Oakland County Council off DEBORA LYNN WALTERS 
4 Mt ts contemplated that the stere.| Sure ees ee Le Nt meee mae -18| of Local 1295, according to Rudolph! Disabled American Veterans has SHELBY TOWNSHIP — Service 
ral ‘special rye Prete ko Cont Gon & BA Pa RR...) 18 |gorrel, bu. 0 C. Lisac, president of the Local. /elected Luther J. Keys, of 2628 La-\to- Debora Lynn Walters, infant 
ACREAGE Con Fa ee Pier on CUM eas eee The Local has filed a grievance | peer Rd., Pontiac Township, as daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Gordon Section 17, W Curtis Pub THT Bhelps - $0 'Turnips. bu. iveperbecennstese F 128 with the board, protesting the hir-|their commander for the coming Walters 46149 Waco St., was to WILLI - a , , WERE AM ue meer She 8s phere ot Pee a 6 SALAD GREENS ees Pee weet auoitves an! y Keys prereuily: Gudge! advocate be held at 11 a.m. iethy fom the nwante d Wei ; \KE WILLIAMS 8U ‘Doug Aire. 49 Pure’ Oil $275 cue Ebemenly {William R. Potere Funeral Home g 
vote stint Bit 78 108. 108. and 110 Ibu Pont. "late Reoublte tf ao opportunity to prove themselves of Pontiac DAV Chapter 16, ha$/a+ Rochester with burial in Utica pits 0 iniaas OARDENS 8UB Fast Air L. Revion hit : 45 |worthy of the job, Lisac said. | been a member of that chapter for Cemetery. Has Been Lost by Lots 58. 59. 60 and 6} |Faton Mig TEE betsy Pesta We. sseesterseeseees 225) ; Seven years and a member of the Debora’ died! Saturday at Chit} : 
eC Assessments, JAMES E.SEETERLIN, |E] Auto l «..., 1 MG Lettuce. teat, bus IIIT 2.50] : : Odkland County Council of Vet- «os Hospital, Detroit, of birth Michigan Women in the Waterford Township Clerk Emer Rad — 1 36.7/Romaine BU... sec etee oes. 1.50) News in Brief erans for three years. a She was bean Bi ; __ Aceust 2: et Fredo” 26 6 Others newly elected and their ieee ee First Year HOUSE of VENUS ; a 77 ae ions are: P. VanDevener|@4Y- SUPREME RT OF ATE op Firestone .... * 613] ¢ positions are: Payne . ; NEW YORE COUNTY. OF ONONDAGA | Pood Mach . Socony .,..... 45.6| Poultry and Eggs Billy Moore, of 348 Russell St.,/of Hazel Park senior vice com-| Surviving besides the parents Opened in the State DONAL J. STAMBAUGH. ee a Be ee 73.3 jac Police Su : fi isters. Shirley. Linda Plaintitt Abad Stul ORs sper ya ace 38.7 DETRO NET ROIT POULTRY ‘a io ernie te Te wa cp nen er; paar D. Sain of ae a - oa: cae inches . RES y W , od dag Gen Bak (125 8 ve | u (AP)—Prices pe Ss ntiac, junior vice commander; |Ca 28; 8, REVO SMITH HALE STAMBAUGH, d Brand *.. 68 d fob. No. 1 ty ; , OL ACTION FOR ABSOLUTE DIVORCE /Gen Elec... 812 Bed On fa: sts Live ‘poultr teal ne ‘ ee armed” and robbed of $60 by two! and Alex Dutko ‘of Warren, finan-|James and Steve, all at home; E NOW TO JOIN ndan + oF eav ms 16- eng ¢ ~ 2 Summons! igs Mitte: ae 4 Std Ol) NJ .. 54.5 9-30: caponettes under § “4 9021 ; over unidentified men at the end of cial secretary. maternal grandfather a Hous of VE U Bown hee ae lGen Motors. $7.5 Stree OP :: 3:1 8 Bes. 23. Hess street. ‘ Edington is a member of Pontiac|of Detroit, and maternal grand- e E N $ 
as the place ‘of. trial Cen en fet Stet Pack ... 128 DETROIT EGGS Clayborne © (324 Chapter 101. The other two officers| mother, Mrs. Opel Wilfrod also of! Plaintiff resides iniqen tite... 77.9 SUD,,Ol ..---. 62 DETROIT, Aug. 3 (AP)—Eggs f.0.b. ayborne Carry, o ughes belong to Royal Oak Chapter 19.|Detroit And Red wei ee - — : County: iGcmeses 35 diol .—- 1 (Detroit in Cel oH jfederal foots grades: |St., reported to Pontiac Police Sat- 3 3 : n educe e ‘ = " es—Crade umbo tr 
"You sre hereby summoned to a0swot eed Prod Be FORBES oy. wee a 3 1 42: large 40: ynedium 29-32; ‘small 20-9; | jurday that someone broke into Th ds of the complaint in this action, and tolcillette | 33 20%, G Bul ... | 202 grade B large 32-37: brown—grade | lhis h d stol i as ousands o serve & copy of your answer. or. if the|coebel Ar .... 33 Textron - 29.2 extra large bh. large 40; medium 29: his home and stole miscellaneous | , ’ ] H rif complaint is not "perved with this suin- a pales “ake Timk R Bear... $7.5 small 20: checks 22% items valued at $840. ‘Reel oods Startle ousewire Satisfied W e mors, to serve @ notice of appearance, Gan Peige Or pee = Sf Cormeresaty graded: we, 34087 Gil 8.000 : ome 
75 Satter ke a nese ¢ m pone i eh SS 43.3 Twent Cen ... 382 jarge S38, iar a's 12-30: uit oon Best Carpet Cleaners. Owned : ! e j ' H D exclusive of the ane of cecil? aud ae ey a oe Un eee ms ae 30: picts , bo 37-38; extra and operated by Jim Bradford. A POUNDS ave one ; 
Ses ot reas daltare co eeereso, Crewe Gat Ol... 11)_ Uae Aw Lil. 33 ol uate i “Jai mata 21-29; number of years, experience with r | ures Const ts Coast fudgmeni will be taken nesint ‘Wa the|neren Chae’. arp Galt Alte ..-+ $4 one of Pontiac’s largest carpet oas oas ers 60) Qua 
. Bred December 30, 288 pelea FE Be owe i Livestock Deting. rugs. and furniture. Pree | om eer es ’ : A i . 
Never A. MANET. sates Hooker ch se Us Ru ae DETROTT LIVESTOCK estimates at your convenience UTICA (AP) — A startled housewife pulled back into | The Famous Heuse ef Venus Guerentee ri - onee 7 4 ” 
toe aww ‘Bee Office Address Ing Rand "(97.3 us Tob — 243 DETROIT. Aug 13 {AB I= UsDa)—cat.| DE 0 it yourself, Call J mS me her driveway as two cars shot past. One was labeled “police 3 MONTHS FREE “——""“) Gh OC seve —oa © 5 : t gary eset act: Fo 0, 19, 24, 50, lEBspie Cop. °413 Walgreen °°"! 51) slaughter. stee eifers. these tnak- — but the occupants clearly were sinister characters. owe: tll 46 oot me Khawiee cain 
we ae inthe Mech aes Et eee vaverage:c a pa cect, wih on : Mrs. Shirley Desaele, 27, of suburban Sterling Township, im 68 days: ~~ - eet 3 "* 955. ased sh of hts under f rf d T h 
Sans Cone topibhe Caamy of ‘Satta ee mM ce “ion Waits Mot : He 100 Ibs.: cows comprise "Stout 2 per Wa e Or Owns | called state police. Her sister next door called the Macomb by lel 
— ey the petition concern- Int phos’ tw wesrwartn?"* $8 ques 2 Ob atid rad  euchter steers County sheriff's. department. Three squad cars sped to the 3 Inches Off Hips Add 2 laches te ter of _ Betition soncern. Int Shoe 1 Woolworth Sie be pag OF coger la rnd and Waist Bust ing. Rs ymon Alt, minor. Cause, child Int Silver 8 Foungst 6h So&T 144.6) ae: cows cnemnn pe taahec: ime 0 Wal on rac scene. : 
Peiition LUN fae, inno ee on garip ples food, to Jow choice steers : x *« * Take One Inch ligsees ‘Destuas 
the “tether of sai sent wnerestort of STOCK AVE cholee steers ‘ai - Obviously there was dirty work afoot for the sight that = Aste Se ns 4 child has violated a law| NEW YORK, compiled by | 37 9 bulk choice steers 950-1150 Ibs.| A $5,500 contract will be award- : en s of “he state, and that sald child showld|the Associated 1086 tbs. 39.00 load high choice toed tonight by the Watertord, 2Waited the officers was right out of a reel from “Scarface. cin 
pos ead under the — = in wake Stocks prime, 1550 agers coun sistas 28.00: Township Board for construction} ‘ Eight figures in black derbies, trenchcoats and puffing 
Tn the name of the people of aoe Se one) 80: moat to low choice heifers'of 9 640-foot water main along! big, black cigars milled menacing around two cars. One of 
the heat Se ara te Seu tee (Bee Gems eae 8.115150; tew head up to, 210; standard| Elizabeth Lake road. Four bids| the vehicles had the crude letters “Utica Poli inted “At the, Oaktand Coun Center,| Week Seo :....-3001 1411 9a8 sH308 fo Siw eyet Naeey “Se $o:3 oot aman , ee vs ad the crude letters “Utica Police” painted on | TRIAL end FIGURE ANALYSIS without Obligation. Court House Annex, 1 west Bivd.. tn|Month ago's-..3ae8 1446 TA 2922 Cows ATSOIESOT canneie ane cutterzihave been accepted for the job. the side. A red lantern was perched on top. Pick U the City of Ponting tn said County.” on|Year ego wv... 378-4 11 827 185.8) {4 1f%o. The project is an extension to p Your Phone NOW and get thet slender figure the fith day of Ai A.D. 1959, at|! Bigh coevee3B3.0 147.6 1 $ 235-1 s—Balabdle 700. Butchers steady to = * x * YOU have wanted — He has admired. a the end you /1988 Low 25,1. 9081 1938 $57 211§] mostly abe higher: sows unevenly to a3e|Stririgham School to rectify a con- elweys — He hes elways are hereby commanded to appear per-|1958 High ......312.0 136.5 96.7 214 most’ miked No. 3 8 taminated " bh The figures dropped their cigars and began to run. 
bomally ot oe acussl be make pereeali ET ON AD 88 OMe FESO ibs Ie els OO tee sisatll school. : —_ the When officers rounded up the hard-looking group, it é It being impractics . SP = aod) : property. - , . mmons and notice jots mostly No. 1 190-220 'bs. 15.15-15.25; . : $ vervies heredt, ‘by publieatton of of a copy DETROIT STOCKS Teas? and 3 fo. belcbere | The Board meeting will be at| turned out that they had interrupted a creative endeavor. H ous @ of enu S one week fess. 4 newspaper’ p sring in ¢ and|| Pures att acaclt poe css viebihe ni ed grades sows 200-400 | fae tere 8 p. m. in the Township hall. The “gang” was made up of boys from 16 to 20 years of “eine, oe in sald Honorable ape sh Bhs. & Rawip. Co. High Low Noon melee lable at uly, steady; — r age. They were making an Al Capone film with a home ; ¢ e & : 
Most Poriiae vy rear So this Be oe ‘Hose, Gear Ce. wet hg Wha! Md and good 36 30.5680" cult and ueiny| Farm Totals Dwindle movie ¢amera. x * of July, A i ae Chem. Ce. 13 13 1.3 ala ri _tleughter ’ * Sur ie. a Ons 
Io Rees 2 ae a ASN eran om.) rate ware teat se Oho 3 ig Oo. 192 123 HE gam holes - "ell oe pared with a total of 6,812,000 “We just told them not to make any more movies,” one 8. meget at Square Lave Ra. ; Did and asked. == shauphter: Sets rm Je farm operations in 1935. said. , 
    
       
  
    
‘- 
* jf « 
‘ 
4 
    TWENTY-EIGHT 
  omeo Pic 
10 Beauties Seek to Wear 
Crown at Annual Festival ROMEO — The big moment is fast approaching for 
the 10 girls who will be vying for the title of Romeo 
Peach Queen Friday evening at Romeo Junior High 
School. 
The contest, staged by the Romeo Peach Festival 
Assn., will begin at 8 p.m. and is open to the public free 
of charge. 
Candidates for the crown are title holder in their 
own communities. The girls’ identities will remain sec- 
ret until the queen and her two maids of honor are 
chosen. 
Each contestant will cary a card bearing the name of 
a peach as her sole identification during the competi- 
tion. They will be interviewed individually on stage by * th 
ea .~___ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST. 3, 1959 
ch Queen Friday A} @ 
  
  
Romeo attorney J. Gerald+ 
McLean, acting as master: 
of ceremonies. 
Mrs. McLean is contest chair- 
man. 
* * * 
Musical Gccemepanilcat will be 
provided by the Romeo High 
School dance band under the di- 
rection of E. C. Ojala. 
The entire proceedings will take 
place in front of four out-of-town 
judges who will make the final de- 
cision. : . 
* * * 
Winner of the Peach Queen title 
will receive a formal gown which 
she will wear for her coronation by 
Gov. Williams Sept. 6 and in the 
floral parade on Labor Day. 
An additional gift this year 
will be a free modeling course at 
Patricia Stevens Finishing School 
in Detroit. 
All other contestants also will re- 
ceive the gowns they wil wear at 
to take part in all the weekend 
activities, Mrs. McLean said. 
* * 
Included on their agenda will be 
visits to Detroit's Mayor Louis C. 
Miriana, a Tiger baseball game, 
Selfridge Air Force Base and area 
Speedways and race tracks. 
x * * 
In each instance the girls will 
present baskets of peaches to their 
hosts and other dignitaries present 
at special events. 
Entrants in the contest are’ 
from Dryden, Oxford, Lake 
Orion, Rochester, Armada, War- 
ren, Waterford Township, Utica, 
Ortonville and Romeo. 
The stage setting and bouquets 
will be by the Romeo Florist and 
lighting by Verellen Electric Co. 
Stephen Burns will have charge of 
the sound equipment. 
  
Jaycee Auxiliary Slates 
Walled Lake Meeting 
WALLED LAKE — Members of the Walled Lake Jaycee Auxiliary 
will meet 8 p. m. Thursday at the home of Mrs. Charles R. Davis, 
Til Dunreath St. 
. * * *® 
Mrs. Davis and Mrs. Duane Washington - headquartered corpo- 
ration, directed by prominent per- 
sons from the fields of. education, 
aviation, astronautics and related! Bachelor will serve as cohostesses for the evening at which time the group will select a Christmas card the fullest and earliest possible 
participation in space activities by 
our youth,” Anfuso said. Southfield fo Sift 
Water System Installation of 9 Mains 
Called for Immediately 
by Proposal 
immediate 
transmission mains will get the 
when it meets with the planning 
commission at tonight's special 
meeting, City Clerk Patrick Flan- 
nery said today. 
at No. 10 School at 10-Mile and 
Berg roads. 
Estimated cost of the nine 
mains will be $420,700, which 
will be paid through water rev- 
enue bonds, acording to Flan- 
nery, who said there will be no 
increase in the present city wa- 
ter rates. 
The installation of three other 
lines is being considered at a cost 
of $242,600, he added. 
The system is part of a master 
distribution plan which will supply 
the entire 26-square mile city with 
water. The plan, submitted by 
Spalding De Decker Corp., city en- 
gineering consultants, calls for an 
estimated 77 miillion gallons of wa- 
ter a day for the city by 1975. 
This estimate is based on South- 
field’s ultimate growth. Two thirds 
of the city is undeveloped. 
Urges Establishment 
of Space Cadet Corps WASHINGTON (UPI)—Congress 
was urged today to set up a space 
cadet corps to recruit youths for 
the nation’s space effort. 
Rep. Victor L. Anfuso (D-NY), 
a member of the House space 
committee, proposed a bill to 
create and incorporate a space 
cadet corps. = 
Anfuso said the oragnization 
would “encourage and help the 
young people of the country to 
take an active part now and 
eventually to find careers in the 
space sciences and practical 
astronautics.”’ 
“In order to meet the chal- 
lenges of the space age, we need   
The corps would be rin’ by a SOUTHFIELD — A proposed wa- 
ter supply system calling for the 
installation of nine 
City Counticl's undivided attention, Pa 
  FIRST STAGE — The initial phase: of devel- 
opment of the sewage disposal system for Michi- 
gan State University Oakland is the construction 
of sanitary sewers. Here workers of the North- 
east Construction Co., Detroit, put in a manhole 
15-feet below the surface on Avon road, east of Old Perch road 
plant itself will’ 
beginning today. 
of Public Works Two crews of about 20 men each are on the job Pontiac Press Photo 
in Avon Township. The disposal. 
be built after the sewers are in. 
The Oakland County Department 
is directing building operations. 
  
Give to Leonard Family   
The public meeting is to be held       LEONARD — Over 75 neighbors; 
and friends of the John Schirmer 
family attended the miscellaneous 
shower given for them Saturday 
evening at Rowland Hall here. 
The shower was sponsored by} 
residents of the community who 
wanted to help the Schirmers get 
re-established after their home| 
was gutted by fire and most of; 
their belongings destroyed while 
they were on vacation recently. 
    
Dean Hesses 
Honeymoon 
in Tennessee 
WALLED LAKE — Following a 
honeymoon in the Smokey Moun- 
tains and Memphis, Tenn., newly- 
weds Mr. and Mrs. Dean Gordon 
Hess will reside at 960 Adelaide, 
Wolverine Lake. : 
The couple was married at 
Walled Lake Methodist Church 
with the Rev. Fredrick Foutz of, 
Shepherd of the Lakes Lutheran | 
Church officiating at the ceremony. 
The bride, the former Mary 
Jo Hinckley, is the daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Hinckley 
of 1099 Lake Rd., here. Parents 
of the bridegroom are Mr. and 
Mrs. Carl Hess of 960 Adelaide, 
Wolverine Lake. 
A waltz-length gown of white 
lace over satin was chosen by the 
bride for her marriage. Her finger- 
tip veil was held by a seed pearl             
stephanotis. 
x~ « * 
Mrs, Judith Rogers of Northville 
attended as matron of honor. 
            line for the annual Yuletide sales. activities. 
    
Newlyweds to Reside in Marlette After Trip 
MARLETTE — Upon returning from @ honeymoon in the Upper Peninsula, newlyweds, Mr. and Mr William A. Denton will reside in Marlette. The couple were married at the Free, Methodist Church in Snover before an altar banked with palms, candelabra, and baskets of white flowers. 
The Rev. Samual Wurtz of Cass City performed the ceremony, 
The bride, the former Donna Grace Williams, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donus 0. Wil- liams of VanDyke road here. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr, and Mrs. Chester E. Den. 
tons of Snover, 
The bride’s floor-length gown of chantilly lace over net wag accent- ed by a scoop neckline and point- ~ ed sleeves. A tiara of sequins and pearls secured her illusion veil. She carried a bouquet of white heart shaped carnations, 
with pink carnations. centered MRS. WILLIAM A. DENTON     
          
    
  
Attending the new Mrs. Denton| were Barbara Denton, of Snover, 
sister of the bridegroom, 
of honor and Mrs, Sam Senopie 
of Detroit. Mrs. Andy Tomlan of Mt. Clemens and Mrs. George 
Linda Gaulin of Troy and Nancy! 
Denton of Snover served as 
girls, 
Martin E. Denton of Snover | American Legio as ST mas of Detroit, Wayne Billot \of Snover, and Olex Kozub of De- 
j troit. 
i Servin i ar rg er ad bridecmaiae lic ble as ringbearer was John- 
Dan Stanko of Marlette and. Leon- flower) ard Gaulin of Troy and the attendants included Sam 
ple of Detroit. Ushers were 
      Following a 
served his brother as best man) traveled to northern Michigan. 
y r * 
' ers were Ronald.Chiesa of Milford 
and Paul Kilar of Sylvan Lake, 
both brothers-in-law of the bride- 
groom; Gordon Olson of Green 
Bay, Wis., the bridegroom's cous- 
in; and Michael Hinckley, the 
bride's brother. 
* * * 
.A reception was held in East 
Highland following the ceremony. 
Upon returning from the honey- 
moon, the bridegroom will attend 
school in Pennsylvania and later 
open a business in Walled Lake. Friends Aid Fire Victims 
|her heartfelt thanks to her friends 
cap. She carried a cascade ar- 
rangement of white carnations and 
Serving as best man was Charles 
Rogers of Northville, and as ush- The Schirmers, whose plans 
for the future are still indefinite, 
received bedding, kitchen and 
electrical equipment and other | 
household furnishings plus an 
undetermined amount of cash, 
the committee said. 
Mrs. Schirmer, her eyes brim- 
ming over with tears, expressed 
for “their ‘‘kindness and generos- ity.” 
Mrs. Hiram Terry, Mrs. William 
Erickson and Mrs. Raymond R. 
Snyder had charge of the affair). 
at which refreshments were served 
to all who attended. 
4-Month-Old Baby 
Found Dead in Crib 
RAY TOWNSHIP—A four-month 
old baby was found not breathing 
in her bed yesterday morning by 
her mother who called to Romeo   hrea Man Aids 
ing three children, in a_ boating = 
in Saving Five Another. Man Drowns 
- When Small Boat Tips 
in-Lake St. Clair 
A’ Bloomfield Township man 
helped rescue five persons, includ- 
tragedy on Lake St. Clair that 
claimed one life Saturday evening. 
Dewey Phelps, 62, of Detroit, 
father of one of the saved chil- 
dren drowned when the party's 
small boat capsized about 100 feet 
from the Grosse Pointe Farms 
shoreline. 
Joseph Miller of 221 S. Wil- 
Hamsbury Rd., Bloomfield Town- 
ship, John Hartz of Grosse 
Pointe and Charles Jackson of 
Detroit, pulled the victims from 
the water. The rescuers were 
fishing from boats nearby when 
the tragedy occurred. 
Saved from drowning were 
Phelp’s son, Louie, 12; Raymond 
L. McClanahan of Detroit, owner 
of the swamped boat; McClana- 
han’s two daughters, Donna, 8, 
and Marline, 10, and Claude Whit- 
man, also of Detroit. 
The party was headed for a 
Grosse Pointe Farms picnic area. 
McClanahan, who was operat- 
ing the 14-foot aluminum boat 
powered by a 25-horsepower 
motor, charged his boat was 
swamped by the swells of a 
larger craft. 
The drowned man was the only 
one not wearing a life preserver. 
Grosse Pointe Farms Police 
said the mishap would be referred 
to the U.S. Coast Guard for in- 
vestigation. ¢ HEALY, AUGUST 1, 
    
    PAULINE SUE LOWERY 
Mr. and Mrs. Ann B. Lowery 
of 2550 Livernois Rd., Avon 
Township, announce the engage- 
ment of their daughter, Pauline 
Sue to James D. Kemler, son of 
Mr. and Mrs. Donald G. Kemler 
of 5900 Cobb Creek Ct., Oakland 
Township. James is stationed in 
Norfolk, W. Va., with the U. S. 
Navy. No date has been set for 
the wedding. 
  
  Rescue Squad to try and revive the 
infant. The emergency crew's ef. | 
forts proved fruitless, and the child 
was pronounced dead at the Com- 
munity Hospital near Almont. 
Dead is Maureen Slane, daugh- 
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Slane, 
of 17389 28 Mile Rd. Romeo 
State Police said the mother 
found the baby in her crib with 
her head in a corner against the 
mattress. | 
Coroner Dr. Stanley Schultz said 
the baby died of suffocation. The 
child had not been ill, he said. 
  
Moroccan King Rushes 
Home to Settle Dispute 
RABAT, Morocco (UPI)—Gov- 
ernment officials today “were 
anxiously awaiting the return. of 
King Mohammed V to deal per- 
sonally with a political dispute 
that threatens Morocco with wide- 
spread civil disorders. 
The king left Paris hurriedly last 
night after being advised of the 
seriousness of the situation, in 
which - left-wing and _ right-wing 
groups were at each other's 
throats on the issue of Moroccan 
policy toward France. 
He had been in the French 
capital for a tonsillectomy, but his     to Open Modern Auburn Orchards 
Rochester Store 
ROCHESTER — Owners of Au- 
burn Orchards Market, Inc., of 
1920 Auburn Rd., Shelby Town- 
ship, haye announced plans to open 
a new and modern food center 
here early. in September. 
Michael Giancotti, part owner 
and manager of the Shelby mar- 
ket, said purchase of the building 
which formerly housed the Kroger 
Co. store on Main street here has 
been completed and an extensive 
remodeling program. will soon 
get under way. 
To be called the ‘Rochester 
Food Center,” the new store 
will incorporate the newest mer- 
chandising features plus “magic 
doors,” piped-in music and air 
conditioning, Giancotti said, 
Over-all floor space covers 7,900 
square feet. ‘ 
- The owners have three orchards 
in the area which they operate 
in conjunction with their food 
centers. 
will be Ronald Pini of Shelby 
Township and Car! Pini of Detroit. 
      sudden departure required plans/ 
for the operation to be set aside. The latter expects to move into .j{the Harmon J. Pikes or vice versa. 
Comanagers of the new corel Oxford. Robert is the son of Mr. Homing Pigeon 
Adopts Couple 
Who Found It ' 
AVON TOWNSHIP—Homer the 
lost homing pigeon, has found a 
new home here. He has adopted 
Mr, and Mrs. Pike, who live at 
2960 Crooks Rd., found the bird 
on the front lawn Thursday and 
discovered it had a band on its leg 
with the nunber 839AU59 F.H.C. 
on it. 
“The couple decided it must 
be a homing pigeon that had 
become exhausted after along 
trip, and they decided to keep 
it until its owners could be found. 
When they received no inquiries 
about the bird they released it one 
evening expecting it would find its 
way home. But, when they opened 
the back door the following morn- 
ing, there was the pigeon back 
again. 
The bird must sense that the 
Pikes are people who love animals 
and birds, Mrs, Pike had a pet 
chicken at one time. 
  
&. 
  SONJA E. BOOSE 
Announcing the engagement of 
their daughter, Sonja, to Robert 
L. Knauf are Mr. and Mrs. Her- 
man Boose of 28 Stanton Rd., 
‘and Mrs. Roy J. Knauf of 760 
Sanders Rd., Oxford Township. 
The couple plan an Oct. 10 
  the area in the near future.       wedding. 
  ¥ 
Disease on Rise Again   
LANSING (UPI)—The same 
|problem that made Louis Pasteur 
famous in the 19th century — tu- 
berculosis in cattle — is costing 
Michigan farmers money in 1959. 
Pasteur developed a. process 
used on milk — pasteurization — 
that when followed prevents peo- 
ple from getting TB from animals. 
Other scientis{s following in his 
footsteps worked to eliminate the 
disease in cows’ yntil in 1940, 
every state in the United States 
was certified as having less than 
one half of 1 per cent of its 
cattle infected, 
But then bovine TB began to 
increase. 
Since the mid-1950s the disease 
has become more widespread un- 
til m the last two years, about   reception at the one of every 65 Michigan cattle n Hall, the couple tested was a_ reactor. 
Health authorities say this does TB in Cattle Costs Farm not mean there is any great danger 
to humans. 
: * * 
However, cattle who react to TB 
tests must be slaughterd. Dr. Asa 
Winter, chief' of the disease era- 
|diction branch of the Federal-State 
Cooperative Disease Control Sec- 
tion, said in spite of salvage value. 
and indemnity payments by the 
government, it costs farmers 
money. 
LOSES MILK 
Even if the farmer gets the full 
cash value of the cow, he must 
replace the animal and loses on 
milk it would have produced, 
An altopsy on the dead animal. 
determines how much of the car-     \from both the state and federal 
(evensent hélp make up the loss. 
| Michigan State University has 
f' an be sold d paynrents disease — unless they drink raw,, cass can sold and payments) unpasteurized milk — are ‘slim. improved *method, eradication of U.S. Department of Agricultare 
to find a better method of de- 
tecting TB in cattle. Initial 
grants totaled $210,000 and ad- 
ditional payments were expected 
to bring the final amoupt over 
000, 
Michigan State University offi- 
cials and members of several farm 
groups met with legislators re- 
cently to try and get money for 
an isolation building that would 
help in the research program but 
none was appropriated, ° 
. * * * 
An estimated 25,000 Michigan 
farm people come in contact with: 
tubercular cows daily. 
But their chances of getting the) 
Health department officials said 
‘there is no “particular” danger|danger that a farmer may have 
to 
been given a grant from the | The kind of (TB humans can'ducing animal may come, farmers from the cow itself. ers Money 
get from cows or untreated milk 
is bone and joint TB rather than 
the respiratéry variety. 
A difficulty is telling when a 
cow has TB. An infected animal 
coughs some and milk produc- 
tion may fall off, but a full- 
scale test is needed to be sure 
the cow has the disease, 
The disease control branch tests 
about a fourth of Michigan’§ cows 
each year, Winter said, 
In the 1957-58 fiscal year, 492,- 
000 were tested and in the year 
ended June 30, about 350,000 were 
tested. ; 
It is hoped that a better de- 
tection method will eome out of 
the MSU studies, And from the   the disease and removal of the 
to slaughter a valuable, milk-pro-     June A. t 4 Richard Crane, dear Brother of Mra. Prank Boyne, 
xe Interment in 4 
: 2, 1069, MI-. “ ee Rag Pontiac Drive, | ¢ oses, id 
: band of Elizabeth qi: gy Ae og dear father of   
5 £ 
-] 8 
5 
- a 5 
: “< 
  ing for church. 
1959, BEA- 
trice M., 493 Lowell St., age 64; 
dear mother of and Miss 
Margaret Bowden, dear sister of 
Bert Monroé, Selby Monroe, Mrs. 
Gladys Jangowbke and Mrs. Haze! Peterson. 1 grandson, Darry! Bow- 
den and 2 granddaughters, San- 
dra and Sheryl Bowden also sur- 
vive. Puneral service will be held 
Lee eyed io a 6 from the 
sDeWitt C. Davis Funeral 
at 2 pm. with 
Thurston officiating. 
in White Chapel. —_ 
KINNER, AUGUST 1, 1959, HATTI 
71 Lafayette, 86; dear mother o 
Mrs. Viola Colegrove and Mrs. 
Myrtle Jones. Funeral service will 
be held Wednesday, August 5, 
1959 at Shaffner eral Home, 
Bolivar, New York. Interment in 
Maple Grove Cemetery, Shingle- 
house, Pennsylvania. Arrange- 
ments made by Huntoon Puneral 
Os peer 
KOWALSKI, AUGUST 2, 1959, 
Anna, Bay City, Michigan, 47; 
beloved wife of Joseph Kowalski: 
dear mother of Mrs. Richard 
(Lillian) Curn and Joan Kowal- 
ski; dear sister of Mrs. 
(Stella) Jankowski, 
(Helen) Konot, and Henry To- 
gorzelski; also survived by 3. 
randchildren. Lying in state at 
‘oats Funeral Home, 3141 Sasha- 
baw Road, Drayton Plains this 
evening. Will be taken to the 
Trahan Funeral Home, Bay City, 
Tuesday am. for service and 
burial Thursday, August 6, 1959. 
LEWIS, AUGUST 2, 1953, GEORGE Leonard, 68 N. Washington 8t.,° 
Oxford, age 72; dear father of 
Mrs. John Chillicutt, Mrs. M. 
Evelyn Lewis, John L. Lewis, J. 
Gardner Lewis; 4 grandchildren 
and 3 great grandchildren also 
survive. Puneral service will be   
lace officiating. Interment in 
Highland Cemetery. Mr. Lewis will 
Ne in state at the Voorhees-Siple 
__ Funeral Home. 
SLAVIN, AUGUST 3, 1959, ESTELLA 
Clarence, 74; dear 
mother of Mrs. Noel (Maxine) 
Hayward; dear sister of Mrs. 
Alice Messner. Puneral service 
be held Wednesday, August 
at 1:30 p.m. from : 
e with Rev. 
Gibson officiating. Inter- 
in Roseland Park. 
SYMONS, DANIEL W., 544 W. 
Brown, Birmingham; father of 
Mrs. Charles M. ones, Mrs. 
Loren O'Brien, Mrs. J. Howard 
Wendorph, Mrs. Cidney O’Brien, 
Mrs. Elsie Knox, Mrs. Louis Clark 
M. Symons. Memorial 
service Monday 8 p.m. by City of 
1:30 p neral Home, 183 Grace, 35 
  
Manley Bailey 
Oakland, Birmingham. Entomb- 
_ ment, White Chapel. 
WALLACE, AUGUST 1, 1959, FRAN- 
ces W., 627 E. Kennett, age 60; 
dear mother of Lyle W. McClem- 
ents, dear sister of Mrs. Lewis 
Jolls, 1 granddaughter also sur- 
vives. Funeral service will be held   
with Or. Milton H. 
ating. Interment in Pairview 
Cemetery, Brighton, Michigan. 
Mrs. Wallace will lie in state at 
the Voorhees-Siple Puneral Home. 
NEED A FINANCE- 
FIXER? Order Classified 
Ads to sell, rent, find a 
good job. FE 2-8181 is 
the Want Ad number!     
  
  
The Pontiac Press . 
FOR WANT ADS_ 
DIAL FF 2-8181 
From 8 a.1n. to 5 p.m. 
All errors should be re- 
rted immediatedy. The 
ress @ssumes no reéspon- 
sibility for errors other 
than to cancel the charges 
for that portion of the first 
insertion of the advertise- 
ment which has been ren- 
dered valueless through the 
error. When cancellations 
are made be sure to i 
your ‘kill number.” ° 
adjustments will be given 
without it. 
Closing time for advertise- 
ments containing type sizes 
larger than regular agate 
type is 12 o'clock noon the 
ay. previous to publication. 
NOTICE TO 
4 ADVERTISERS - 
The deadline for cancelle- 
tion of transient Want Ads 
is now 9:15 a.m. the day of 
SS after the first ertion. 
CASH WANT AD RATES 
Lines 1-Day 3-Days onere 
2 . $1.50 $2.04 qt 
3 1.50 2.97 50 
4 2.00 3.84 5.76 
5 2.50 4.50 6.70 
6 3.00 5.40 8.20 
7 3.50 6.30 9.66 
8 4.00 7.20 11.04 
9 4.50 cc 12.42 
10 5.00 9. 13.80 
& >   
    
~ BOX REPLIES 
At 10 a.m. Today t"ere 
were replies at The Press 
office. in the following 
boxes: 
6, 6, 7, 8, 14, 28, 30, 31, 
32, 35, 56, 57, 63, 80, 88, 
é 90, 103, 110, 119.     
  “se 
In Memoriam 2 
IN. LOVING MEMORY OF 
George Willis who passed away 
August 2, 
The depths of sorrow we cannot   
  
Ot ‘the loss of one we loved so 
And’ while he sleeps a peaceful sleep, 
His memory we shall always keep 
Always remembered by his wife, 
children & grandchildren. 
Funeral Directors 4 
COATS FUNERAL HOME 
Drayton Plains OR 3-7787 
Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME 
“Designed for Funerals” 
Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Eran oF Motor 
Thoughtful Service pe a sea 
Cemetery Lots 5 Lm, 
4 CHOICE LOTS (6 GRAVES TO lot) in section § Perry-Mt. Park. 
1 choice fot at Oakiand Hills Cem- 
etery near Walled Lak. \e ry ok ‘sae @ and Novi. 
RRY MT. PARK CEMETER 
SECTION 3, PERRY MOUNT 
Park Cemetery, one lot, $100 per 
grave. FE 2-0186»   
  
  
  
  
PRICES ARE GOING UP 
METERY LOTS 
AT A DISCOUNT. Must sacrifice 
t Park; 5 lots 
Walled Lake near Novi). 4 lots White 
412 W. Huron st. 
rE   . 3B | 
5 t — ae an a! lait 
, fenced -. a bo ig 241 W. Y E at 
T OR SALE: 4 Ri 
tS ka full basement. Williams _ grea. Must sell; transferred 
out of~ state. Will c any i 
reasonable offer. PE 2-7750. ; 
3 TRUE — NOG COMPLICA- TONS IN BUYING THIS. FINE HOME.” Nearty new — 3 bedroom ranch, -car garage. Has 1% baths, 
es e ueility tom, many more 
own. - . 
— = of roo slopes QL 
7 or ntment. 
RANE SHEPARD. REALTOR 
1010 Adams 5 Rocberer 
ROOM HOUSE; 4 BEDRGOMS. 
gcent kitchen. ige. utility, 12x60 
insulated garage. 1 acre of lot. 
Large garden. 1 block off Dixie 
Hwy. Fu: price $8,950. $950 down. 
Private owner. 3145 Warren Dr., 
Drayton Plains. OR 3-5855. 
FOR COLORED 6 rms. & bath. Nr. school & bus. 
$8,000 with $750 down. FE 2-3043. 
GI RESALE 5 ROOM RANCH. 3 blocks from Waterford High. $65 
per mo. $750 down. OR 3-5291. 
WEST SUBURBAN. BY OWNER. 
3 bedrm. rarch type. 16-ft. living   
*. features H 
  
  
  
Landscaped acre 
_ schools OR 3-8191. 
BY OWNER, 2 BEDRM., RANCH, 
4 years old, $8500. 2641 Walnut, 
_ JUniper 8-2581. 
$875. EQUITY TAKE OVER PAY- 
_ments, $89 mo FE 4-5135. 
Sacrifice—By owner 3 bedroom home. All brick. Full 
basement. Lake privileges. Auto- 
matic oil heat. Near aad fa 
center & school bus line. A 
_equity. OR 3-6873. No dealers.   
  
  
BEDROOM BRICK, DRAYTON Plains, OR 3-4230. 
“BUD" First Time Offered Exciting. luxurious 3  bed- 
room, semi-bungalow brick 
home in_ highly desirable 
Donelson Park. Custom built 
for more living pleasure, 
Anderson windows, Tennes- 
see ledgerock fireplace, ma- 
hogany paneled den, fine 
cafpeting, 2% baths, delight- 
ful breezeway with jalousie 
windows, attached 2 car ga- 
levely grounds. Of- 
fered at $40, by appoint- 
ment only. 
“BUD” Nicholie, Realtor 
49 Mt. Clemens St. 
FE 5-120) or FE 
MONDAY 5-8 P.M. 
On Hi Lure St. 
ROLLING COUNTRYSIDE   
2-2326   
A Colonial exterior but as 
modern as ‘Tomorrow’ 
‘ home 
Priced in the $26,000 brack- 
et that honestly has every- 
thing: even an indoor fil- 
tered SWIMMING POOL. 
The kitchen is . perfection: 
ultra-modern with built-ins 
‘and large enough for Sun- 
day dinner for the family. 
A dining room for your 
more forma] dining. You'll 
have 3 bedrooms plus den— 
that 2nd bath, of course, 
and two natural. fireplaces: 
one in-the living room, the 
other in the huge finished 
recreation area. A 2 car 
plastered garage can be du- 
peceied on 
ON US.26 TO u. SIGN. PHONE 
RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 362 8. Telegraph Rd. en 9-9 
re 3-7103 On   
IN COLONIAL HILLS 8UB. 
Excellent 2 bedroom home fea- 
turing large carpeted living room 
with fireplace, carpeted dining 
room, tiled bath, shower, enclosed 
breezeway. Attached garage. Full 
basement. Recreation room with 
fireplace Large covered patio. 
Extra large lot with many stately 
trees) Paved drive. Early pos- 
session. $26,500 with $5,000 down. 
H. P. HOLMES, Inc. 2531 8. Lapeer Rd. FE _ $-2953 
MAN LEAVING TOWN. SACRIFIC-   
ing home. Five rooms. 3 bed- 
rooms, ful! basement and ga- 
Tage. 8-A671.   4 RM AND BATH, LE. PRIVI- 
leges. Lot 50 x 150 Lae Tool 
Shed. $5,590. OR 3-6611. 6490 
Prairie Lawn Drayton Plains.   
. recreation room, 
aluminum siding and 
awnings. Large fenced vard. Lake 
Orion. M 1 
PERSONALIZED HOMES PE 8-2200   
4 BEDRMS, $1000 DOWN 
2 tile baths. Fenced lot. Wall-to- wall carpeting. 201 W. New York. 
Call owner. OA 8-2018. 
FOR COLORED _ 3 bedrm. home. d toe e. $450 dwn. FB 
2 or 3 BEDROOM HOME. CAR- 
pettea & built-ins. Must sell. Low 
own Pmt. Near MSUO. FR 
_ 81577. BY OWNER 
8ALE—TRADE—OR LEASE 
With option — § bedroom home 
on extra large lot in desirable 
location % mile North of Post 
Office On paved dead-end street. 
Ideal for children. Very favorable 
terms or will trade equity for 
anything. of equa) value. Phone 
OR 4-0306.   
  
  
  LEAVING CITY 5 ROOMS, REAS. FE 2-€682, 1138 Lakeview. 
2 BEDROOM HOME AT CRES- aa $8 000. $1,000 down. FE 
_EAST LeBARON STREET, 2 BED- rooms, finished attic, plastered 
Hotmsi & scresee. Gey Denes screens, as heat. ce 
10,300. OR 3-8021.   
  
lot. $10 
KENT Established in 1916 
GOOD VALUE — Nice family 
home on west side. 4-bedrms., 
2 cer. tiled baths, carpeted liv- 
ing rm. Full bsm't., gas heat, 
.. paved street. Close te 
us, schools and stores. F.H.A. 
approved. $14,500 with $2,000 dn. 
REDUCED — To only $4,750. 
West suburban cottage, 2-bedgme. 
plus sleeping porch, fireplace in 
living rm., part bath Garden 
fpece and fruit trees. Privileges   
  
ood sandy b . aon poy y beach. Only $950 
SHADY AND COOL teal — A 
value 3-bedrm, ranch type home. 
Fireplace in pleasant living rm., 
bam't. and (oe “heat, 2-car ga- 
rage. Large lot located near Wat- 
kins e. See this at $0,500. 
Terms. 
DIXIE HWY. Frontage with about 
1% acres of land. 3-bedrm. home. Possible for home and business. Ea ot buy at $8,500 with $1,500 
LAKE FRONT — High scenic lot 
with attractive willow trees § 
room home and unfinished second 
floor, Full bsm't., rec. rm. and 
ee ar raeeeeet porch, 
erage. a dee 
All for fis, — Terms. = 
Floyd Kent, Inc., Realtor 
Hwy. at Telegra: 
PE 2-0123 — A ee   
DON’T WISH FOR 
MONEY! Make it easily 
through Classified Ads. To 
sell, rent, buy, swap, hire; 
dial FE 28:81.    a + ow 
THE. .PONTI AC PRESS. MONDAY. AUGUST 8, "1950 3 
  
  
    
      
  ROCHESTER Cod Colonial, Real new, 
sq. 4 plus 
and basem at 8: Ss 
_down, OL 1-841. 
OAKWOOD MANOR 
LAKE PRIVILEGES 
SANDY BEACH   
  ; 6 
LIVING BEDROOM. LARGE . a i beat, bong niece 
oh down 
Be 5 bd o% _For Sale Houses _ 
cL BARGAIN . OSE TO DOW 
Beisel RAE tn ING ROoM, DINING ROG ye DOWN, FULL 
Ew HEA 
REASONABLE DOWN PAY. 
JM WRIGHT, Realtor 
  345 Oak! smOpen “Git oes OH 
‘1 1] 
Spotless 
3 Bedrooms   & 3 Bedroom, ranch, ted sala home | 
y restricted subdivision LAKE P between Dixie Highwa: d Lower All you SP ERIVILEG bs lisa Silver Lake. La Large Ly Ro mand ily. home in highly desir- wail: able neigh - Lake Kitchen with eating space, privileges on igabe ceramic tile bath, full basement ake, golfing at nearby with tiled floors and ceiling and ontiac Country jb. 1% recreates es r two| story “Cedar Shake’ home car rage, lan ped acre lot with bedrooms and full end Sement Sieesy. two blocks pee sown. ae dining 8 priva’ sand rpeting. immaculate beach. Sale by owner. 7 basement, love ely yard. First peel ie tfered, e sure you 
toe reed 
  
3 BEDROOMS. Pull basement. Gas rarases: - 
ly decorated. $11,000. Terms. ms 
OMS" roy see ences. Nice loca- 
CUCKLER REA LTY 
GI's" Nothing Down 
- BRICK FAMILY, oe al- 
reas sap a proved 'b   
rage. x131 ft. lot in th 
city. Hurry! =“ 
POTLESS TWO-BEDROOM 
Mae full ae 
new, gas furnace. 1'2 car 
gardae, ve on 2 beauti- 
sare tcere oo Full Price only 
basement, 
ome. A quiet, 
pretty bere: street ideal for 
ehild 
in the bar 
lieve you' 
MIDDLE STRAITS Lake 
privileges Wooded and se- 
cluded, beaten path 
yet only minutes from stores, 
schools and churches. A 
lovely 2 bedroom ranch =a 
id 
‘00 . Area Northern woods 
mosphere — Call now! 
RAY O’NEIL, Realtor 262 S. Telegraph Rd. 0; 9-9 
FE_3-7103 OL 1-575   
  » 
      
3 homes’ allan Lake 
nice area. 
very rea- 
sonably ih quick sale riced 
Call : or appoint: 
rayton Plains 
5 room brick, 2 bedroom. Car-’ 
peted living room. Exceptionally | 
large kitchen & dining. Full tiled 
bal Ol] heat. 2 
Beautiful 100 x 200 ft 
lot. Owner = state, No rea- 
sonable offer refused 
Sacrifice Owner willing to sacrifice this 
exceptionally nice 3 bedrooms. 
Separate dining room. pene ement. 
2 car hile au 1 block to McCon- 
nel Schoo: Reasonable down 
payment or large discount for 
cash to mortgage. 
GEORGE BLAIR REALTOR 
4536 Dixie Hwy, R 3-1251 
DR N- AINS 
Eves. OR 3-1703 or OR 3-8842 
aa   
EAST 8 
Near 1 Boy 8 ae 3 bedroom home 
ment, gas heat, garage. 
Tmmedis oats Beemer. EASTERN 
JR. IST 
Wideman 412 W. Huron Open 
_ FE 474526 
STOUTS 
Best Buys 
Today 
- SCHOOL BELLS 
Will soon be ringing, You 
can be moved into this 5 
“now. Newly re- 
itchen, spacious 
dining room, 2 big bed- 
rooms, 1% car gara; .. with 
paved driveway. Price in- 
eludes appliances and car- 
xeellent terms. 
ROCHESTER FRUIT FARM 
—- . acre estate with 
seal aoa cin a Rapa At- 
with 3 baths, full Basements 
stoker heat all king si 
rooms, ng es en a 
en coop, ba garage 
$5,000 di i, own. | Eves. 
  
* 
4 BEDROOMS $10,950 
And iocated. in Waterford 
with paved siMewalks! Bi 
y ea' 
pal tee here parece we ae ‘ 
WEST es 
Located off H 
ter 
Warren Stout Realtor 77: N. S Maw oF 
  
MT. CLEMENS HILLS :7® owner. 6 tooms on 1 ge jus 3 rm. 
  Tid 
. FE 5-8165|, p.m. _ 
Baas og Beer Clarkston Area ONLY $1,500 DOWN 
For the big family, this spa- 
cious, 4 bedroom older home 
. 3 bedrooms up- 
bath, large country 
kitchen, basement, 
heat and hot 
34 acre sedom fo 
=a pas om fer ‘oe Eigaies 
“BUD” Nicholie, Realtor |? 
“our Meal “—_ Tr 
‘FE _5-1201 OE 2-3370 
VAL-U-WAY FCR VALUES & TRADES 
WEST SUBURBAN 2 bedroom with lots of clos- 
et space — full bath with 
vanity — large ee room 
—- dining room — cute kitch- 
en. Oil heat. Enclosed 
with fireplace. Beautiful 
x200 lot With lots of suraber 
flowers and ae Ppt 
jent to schoo) shop- 
BE esl 810450." S78 per 
R. J. (DICK) VALUET RE. 
345 Oakland ee LTOR 
FE 5-0693 or rE 4: 3531 
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 
1 = 
auual 
STATELY TREES make a 
lovely setting for this ranch 
home. It has a large living 
room with aii ell. 2 bed- 
rooms and ba’ Pleasant 
kitchen with eating space. 
There is a breeseway and 
1% car garage. Full base- 
ment with finished rec- 
reation room featuring a Ro-   
  
  
      
man brick fireplace. Owner 
leaving the State. Priced at 
$13,500 with terms. 
BETTER EAST SIDE LO- 
CATION. This 4 bedroom 
on 2 wel} landscaped 
lots. bedrooms and bath, 
down and 2 bedrooms up. 
Basement with gas conver- 
terms with $1.400 down. plus 
mortgage costs. 
CHOICE NORTH SIDE }o- 
cation. This 2 bedroom home 
with expansion attic has 
nice living room with oF 
ant view of the park. Full 
basement, gas heat. Owner 
- retiring. riced for quick 
sale at $9.950 Terms, 
Kost SIDE is the loca- 
2 bedrooms,  =bitchen. til- 
down and assume 4% 
pe cent mortgage. Pay- 
ments $71 per mo. including 
taxes and insurance. 
VERY ATTRACTIVE two bedroom home. Nice - size 
living room, real sha 
kitchen. FOR the folk 
Tees ne arden this lot 
per m 
RAY. O'NEILL, Realtor 
  re Snore = Ont 088 
4] // 
SILVER LAKE FRONT 
Large rooms in this outstand- 
ing location on Silverside. 26 ft. 
living room with fireplace. Full 
basement. FA heat. 2 glassed-in 
porches. Truly a- fine home. 
Lovely landscaped lot. Good 
sandy beach, Only $19.000 with 
terms. 
$300 DOWN 
Almost new 2 bedroom Ranch. 
Neat as a pin. FA heat. Water 
softener, Aluminum storms and 
screens. Garage. Fenced yard. 
Paved street. Good location. 
Near bus and schools. 
$500 DO No eee costs moves you in 
this extra-nice 2-bedroom Ranch 
Plastered walls, oak fjoors, 
FA heat. Princi and interest 
payments only $44.25 per mo. 
™% AC RES ; 
Ideal for the part time farmer. 
Nice 2 bedroom home w un- 
furnished attic for additional 
bedroom. Full basement, oj] fur- 
nace, 14x36 chicken house. Good 
[ote ‘Only $12.000 full price with 
erms, 
FRANKLIN BOULEVAR! 
Ideal for professiona) ‘pulling 
or can be a family home 
large rooms. ore fireplace. 
Full basemen furnace. 
Large lovely cachet landscaped 
soci well shaded Let us show 
WILLIAMS ve te & —_—_ 1480 Bs BALDWIN 
CLARK EAST telat Modern 2-bed- 
on large room a 100x- 
wet ard 
we oer 680 ae — — 
ST —- . Modern 5-room: bun- 
enclosed f: allo wall Carpeting "ait wpeen: 
Baddoe ol hea’ garage. ott North with easy terms. 
COLEMAN School   f   
erator. nies tot. $14.250. Terms. 
BRICK. Imm 
  room and landscaped 
CLARK att ESTATE SELL & gy ogre 
iustine nage       BY ¥ OWNER. V & For Sale Houses 6 Pht IS Sang or Oe ee we oe 
~ $450 DOWN 
bas eat Hot water, Loe 108 ue. privileges. Near schools | 
3 BEDROOM FRAME. ‘ basement. ons heat. Hot 
‘water, Lot 15 210 «Blacktop 
street. Near pebools & & stores. 
W. G. WHITCOMB, ALTR. 
4 UL 2-2930 
aa ie room ranch ar 
lot. Full tied - base’ ot, Wil anerifice for quick 
Sale mca 4-3838 
MODER oT EDRM. HOME O} Pratt Li cere ON —_ 
Whitney, RFD _2. Gladwin’ Mich, GA -€.7900 2 7 BEDROOM F HOME 43 BELLEVUE. 
$6,500 with © $600° dome Owner, 
__ phone number PE 2.9084.   
~ West Suburban Income Nearly new 6-room and bath up. 
2 bedroom, living 
attached 2-car marage. 3 nicely 
landsca\ lots. Lake privileges. 
$3,000 down will handle. 
Dorothy Snyder Lavender ealtor Est. 29 Years 
  
SCHOOL — in ne 
ater on bungalow with 
tile bath. New Schon full base- 
ment with gas heat, Sy pele ‘drive 
to 2 car garage. any, many 
extras. Owners anxious to sell, 
call now and make offer. 
FARMHOUSE 8 ACRES. Lo- 
cated only 4 miles West of city 
limits on Hiller Rd. Large farm 
type home that were te rernodar 
‘ing Close to schools an. 
1 cans afer neighbor 
950 on term 
RILEY RE AL "EST ATE 509 Elizabeth Lake Ro 
FE 4-1157 FS 44 4-4821 
450 Down — 3 Bedroom, basement, 
lake front property, wooded lot 
very scenic: 
= Deas wales school near, 
bedrooms. Pp x 175 
corger lot, 64. o per month in- 
cluding taxes and insurance. 
us mortgage costs, ex- 
forest home, 2 bedroom pol 
"ceptions 
nm and sun oe 
Bie basement. 10,500, 
low monthly payments. : 
150 Down—j3 bedroom brick, West 
suburban, near school, large cor- 
ner lot, newly decorated, im- 
“mediate possession. 
2500 Down—3 bedroom, full base- 
ment, Clarkston area near school 
and lake privile a ictean and 
neat, full price 15, 
PE 4-3569 PE 5-5841 
WM. A. 
KENNEDY Realtor 
3101 W. Huron Bt. 
  
$25 Moves You In IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 
Hurry—Only 2 Left 
Milford. 3 bedrooms. G. A. heat. 
Paved street City sewer gnd 
Fui. basement, re ge 
4% it. car- 
stove and talcigecaiae! 
any other extras. $90 per 
month VE 83731. WO 23574, ML 4-0455 Sve. VE 8-3098. 
WEST SIDE. 3 BERM 
home Oi] heat. Near school & shopping center. FE 4-4191 _ 
NOTHING DOWN Beautiful bi-level & tri-level starter 
,omes If you're :ookin; ug for sem ne 
ing different ir the 
er homes — then y 
~ afford to miss this i 
Nothing down on your lot or w 
pest severa) choice lots avail- 
a   
CULLoU GH, "REALTOR 
  McC 
5143 = 
Pe Sr 9 a.m. to 8:30 p. ages 145 
5-1284 PE 4-3844 
3 
BEDROOM 
HOMES - $100 DOWN 
MOVES YOU IN NO MORTGAGE COSTS 
PAYMENTS LESS THAN RENT 
MODEL OPEN WEEKDAYS & sonnet 1:30 TO.6 
— 131 a 
Aga REALTY FE 8-2763 or Eves. LI 2-4677 __ 
HAYDEN LEBARON BCHOOL bedroom home % block E. 
ot Joslyn. Tile Bath. Gas furnace 
& water heater. Wited a dryer. 
i $500. FHA.   
- Vv. Blind. 
ST. PATRICK CHURCH AREA. 
With Lake Privileges. Large 
bedroom home in good .condition, 
ee se Quick possession and o Down. 
DRAYTO 
Excellent 1% story 3 bedroom 
e has alum, siding and a 
rock” trim. L. R. is 12 I 
Separate room, Tile bath. 
Kitchen has cw 3. 
  basement, oil 
Tage. Paved drive. 1 
240. Tractor & —s implementa 
included. A good buy. $13,500. 
erms 
OFF M24 
1‘ “story home with stairway 
to unfinished attic. Lot 100 x 200. 
Oak floors, Full basement. 1'2 
car garage immediate possession 
& only $1.000 a 
> HAYDEN, Realtor 
is E. Walton 
Open Eves_ 
ENCHANTED HOU USE—Only ~ pleas- 
memories could have re- 
mained with this older home in 
Pontiac You can tell by a glance 
its weli kept character has much 
pool we eraceful charm left. 3 
anh aviee room with 
brick "tirepia e an 
ining m 
we 
scaped. Jess down 
Teliable partv — 
A Joven HOME the 
country. a eatin’. a 
in 1954. D oSeokreca sto ranch ae cesie ,oom. ler pared d 
family Plus additional 
and large 1 car 
wet plaster — Co: 
sulated. Built t 
SE Saou REALTORS 
4900 Highland a ae) 
Pontiac, Mich.   
SCHRAM alge rick Rane agp eee 
: me bate | Pe 
“i 25 living room with f 
at 
16,000 arranged. 
— Zon 
—— $2,500 will han- ~ 
bearecte Tanch on Whip- 
re 18x26 livin 
Ww kitenen and apn d letor fifepiace in recreation 
  room. 2 car attach aad 
ot a waa cten es wil 
by je 
IVAN W. SCHRAM 
REAL TOR, FE 5-9471 
& SUNDAY — 
*SecERE pes ee? 
  MODEST- MAI DENS 
  
  
    
  Taw By Jay Alan 
| * 
  
  
  PNLAN- 
‘ 
“This is my boss’ desk — he's a former frogman!” 
  
___ For. Sale Houses 6 
SMALL HOUSE, NEEDS REPAIR. 
East Auburn. No down ptcediotleg 
FE 4-7928._ BIRMINGHAM 
2 bedrooms. Oi] heat. 
Beautifully landscaped 
ee 6 
Basement. 
60 = ft. lot. 
1 t cen own. 
wo KOR’ RLTR. - 
$100 Down Complete exterior. 3 bedrms. Pul? 
bsmt. Rough wiring. $6350 on our 
lot. Nothing down on your lot. 
MA 6-3858. FE 5-5078.   
  
| INDEPENDENCE TWP. 2 bedroom home, 7 miles north of 
Pontiac. Hardwood floors, oil 
heat. Immediate possession. $7,- 
400; $750 down. maty monthly 
payments. OR 3-8244. 
| WEST SUBURBAN 3 OOM. 
Plastered walis, large ca 
room, oi] heat. Storms an 
screens. Nice lot. 1,200. Mort- 
be ase down for veteran, OR 
NEW 
LOCATION =o bal HURON UITE 4 
e Good Housekeeping Shop   
xonTHWsst SUBURBAN edroom brick bungalow. 
anny sized dining and 
kitchen area. Full basement 
Large lot. Lake 
‘Reasonably priced at $16,- 
* §00 — Terms. 
NO DOWN PAYMENT 
We have several 2 & 3 bed- 
room homes—In and out of 
‘town. Some have basements. 
Payments include taxes and 
4dnsurance-—Call us today! 
buy ‘or 4 000 down. ti possession > 
—Call today 
i) rer INCOME 
you are interested in 
Bane money, call us and 
make an Leese gree to see 
563 Paddock St rop- 
erty is in Ist class ce ition 
» and partly furnished. Priced 
below market value at only 
$12,500. 
MONDAY EVENING CALL: 
FE 2-727 
Ask For Bob Castell 
NICHOLIE & HARGER CO. FE 5-8183 
Gateway Drive Attractive 5-room modern bungalow 
al] newlv decorated. l'o-car ga- 
rage. Lot 50x150. Lake privileges. 
$10,950. Terms. 
Off Glenwood Pay only $1,000 down on this excel- 
lent 6-room modern brick. Full 
basemegt, Recreation room, as 
heat, 2-car garage. 
West Side 
For widow, working couple, or for 
investment. 5-room modern brick 
terrace. Many, many extras. Also 
double garage. Right price and 
Terms. 
Wide Open Space Tosr pao har ily will oer Paced 
ni: room moder 
all on one floor. Has 3 lots and 
arden that will su 
family, Convenien   
on very reaso 
WILLIS M. BREWER JOSEPH F. REISZ, Sales Mer. 
04-06 E. ne Le mn ales 2-5181 
GILES Near Watkins Lake... 
lake privileges. 2 
home on large, 
ed lot. Cyclone fencing. 
a ee Vacant—move 
fn and enjoy the sum-   
Nims 
ee 
$800 Down Like new 2 bedroom home 
inside the city. Picture 
window large living 
room. New wall-to-wall car- 
peting. Cool- vent awnings 
and much oy A real deal 
for only $8,500 
1 Acre 
8 Se bi-level home in a 
west suburban loca- 
[ey ion, Plenty of shade, fruit, 
berries and other extras too 
numerous to mention. Call 
for further information. 
Peat REALTY CO. FE od = BALDWIN AVE 
AM.-9 P. 
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE __ 
7 ROOM dOUSE OIL FURNACE, 
screened porch, %car garage. 
Breezeway 2 acres Cal) after 3, 
_FE 28300.   
  BIRMINGHAM: 1% STORY FACE 
brick, 3 bedroom, 2 car garage, 
carpeting, arenes fireplace, rec- 
reation room, @ ppiiances ional. 
_ Bést offer accepted. MI 48. 
Neat “Modern Home 
On 2 Fertile Acres Only $900 down and 
for this dandy, close 
4 “utility room,   
ter softener, storms and scteens, Perfect for small agg ete 93 
——- Better 1. right 
2 "Bedroom, Lakefront 
$1,500 Down 
basement, automatic gas furnace, full bath. 20 
ing room, good st ay Kuonen Im- 
ediat a 
Dandy 2 os on 
Large Fenced Lot 89 x 160 feet ee beautiful lake- 
e views and ve 
_ of lakes. hor. 
ood. Superbly oe an well 
cared for, Gas heat. tall th, 
part basement, attached 2 car 
arage. €xcellent fishing and 
ting. Pull price $14,500. 
Giroux-Franks 
  co Bins iighere ag NOR Ferm __For Sale He Houses 6 6 
2 BEDROOM, UTILITY, NICE tet 
* shaded lot, nei block off 
Hw ak ce poe t Bar. mrp 
Paull M. Jones, Real Est. 832 W. Huron 
FE 4-8550 PE 8-1275 
~ WOODJA LYKA? - 3 large bedrms., 1% tiled bath 
ranch home. Kitchen has 25 rawl ees Low down payment. = Ww | For Sale Houses 6 
N, 9 BEDRM/ 
  
$9,500: Wull dulid 3 oedroom ranch style | : 
heme on your lot, basement, 
oak f , eth birch cup- 
boards. OR 3-70: 
Russ vab Art Meyer   
WATCH 
The Nationals 
-Go Up! 
NOW STARTING 
CONSTRUCTION IN 
Judah Lake 
Estates 
“NO. 4" * 
See for Yourself... 
THESE HOMES BEING BUILT FOR AS LOW AS: 
NOTHING DOWN 
$82 ! CLOSING COSTS 
$70 PER MONTII 
FHA- $375 DOWN - INCLUDING CLOSING COSTS 
$73 PER MONTH 
DIRECTION: 
COME OUT 6 miles North of the heart 
ef Pontiac on a Rd. — 
Watch for “PAIRWOQOD” % 
    
How about a swim when 
you arrive home from the 
ffice? 
& 
read your Press Like to 
on a screened-in rch in 
the evenings. cat a those 
cool brecses? 
PARTICULARS - 
Three pegtoom a rance home: 
with Nin aS ining 
ell, aren tchen rand cuits room, 
Brick and Asbestos shingle 
construction, four years old. 
Nice big lot on paved street. 
Aluminum windows, storms 
@nd screens, water softener, 
and lawn al in. 
Picture windows in dining 
- @nd uvingroom. 
Privileges on Williams and 
Maceday Lakes 
$12,800 with $2,800 down to 
exis’ mortgage of §10,- oe cag $ 
Cail owner at Orlando ‘* 3-7753 
  TRI-LEVEL STARTER HO Nothing down your lot, small 
  birch cupboards, built-in range 
oven, etc. Paneling in dining H BUILDING COMPANY 
‘area, full Basement, breezeway 
and garage on lotsa jot. Reduced FE 92-9122 
to $17,900. 
3516 LAKEWOOD DR. “Bildor of Nationa! Homes’’ 
WARM Don McDonald 
  bedroom. oil furnate, gara: A-1 
condition, Terms. mearane. 
1,000 down, 2 bedroom, yrey 
ark near Scott Lake 
PONTIAC REALTY 737_ Baldwin FE_5-8275 
SMALL FARM   
ope ene eely 10 acres of land 
with bedroom eee Lo- 
cated north of Pontiac near Oak- 
land Lake. sn 800 with $1, 500 down 
F. C. Wood oe WILLIAMS a RD. AT M59 
AFTER 6 Maple 5-1601 
ANNETT OFF SALDWIN —4 rm & 
tile bath, built 1 Oil fur- 
nace. Price of $7950 includes 
carpeting, Grapes & vene- 
tian blinds 
N... AUBURN HEIGHTS — Cor- 
100x225, arden   
th full size dining room. 
Aree een Timken oi] heat, 
= garage. $8,000, $900 
own. 
N... NORTH SIDE — 5 room & 
bath home in excellent con- 
Ist floor, large room on 
2nd floor, Basement. ges 
heat. 2 car garage, paved 
drive. #11,500; terms. 
Ee INDIAN VILLAGE — Brick 
home conveniently located. 
Ist floor, Jiving room, din- 
& nook; 
& tile bath on 
2nd. Basement, family room, 
& lav. FA oi) heat. Garage. 
Ten. SEMINOLE HILLS—7 room 
brick home, 4 bedrooms, 2'2 
baths, fireplace, carpeting & 
drapes, new tiled kitchen, 
screened rch, 3rd floor 
finished. ecreation room, 
oil heat, 2 car-brick garage. 
$27,500; Terms. 
I . . . 
SYLVAN LAKE FRONT — 
7 room# built of weathered 
brick features den p d dow ent. \- _ 609 E. Flint, w MY Sib 1143 PE 8-2306_ down, our lot. G. Piatt: Ss 2 ley. EM 
SEMINOLE ILLS Low price, good tion, large 
3 bedroom, coast & eit plen, large 
Steg Mbert ace, garage, 
nice wth.so0: Cash to mort: aR 
Marshal] Street. extra nice 3 WILL BUILD  PINISHED 
starter hame with or yout 
basement, on your lot or ours, 
_have model to show. OR 3-2837. 
“LAKEFRONT HOME> On large sessed pos jot 
with 56 nes “bedrobme. good bea 
Living room ng yeas large 
kitchen. com dik sunporch. Mags 
ment. 2 car parses. ner 
Maer state. Will sacrifice for 
$11.5 $5500 down. 'N 
$300 DOWN Includes hart as this J bed-- 
room 142 b: $90 momh. In- 
cudes taxes saa insurance. 
$300 DOWN . 2 bedroom modern, basement, $65 
a month. Includes taxes and in- 
eurance. _ 
C. PANGUS, Realtor 2160 M15, Ortonville, NA 17-2815 
LAKE. ORION... ...:s0 2 story frame, 5 down, 2 bed- 
rooms up. Lots of storage & 
full basement, steam heat, 
pate! eet A es 
“PONT TAC | INCOME 2-5 room rtments. Each have 
their own 2 lities. This place will 
pay for — mall down pay- 
ment der trade. 
A WEEKEND SPECIAL 2 bedrooms, full basement, me 
fenced lot. Fruit an rapes. 1] 
ereae. $7,000. eagonab 
CRAW FORD ances   
teem For Sale Hou Houses 6 6 
© ustge te lot. OP pect ate omnes 
SS ROBOLINK 132 NEAR   
decorating. Lag 
ot peat 100 ft. lot witt 
privileges. Will take lot, 
Bi ment. 
owner, 
k.-1. WICKERSHAM. 7196 W. Maple MA_ 6-6250 
NO MONEY DOWN TO 
RELIABLE PERSON No other 
248 W. Lougietiee. Bull's 2 bed- 
bsmt., auto. Paved rooms, 
street. Very nice, $78 an “Vacant. 
diate Walk   
ES SAT. & 
PIONEER HIGHLANDS—CORNER 
2-bedroom~ brick, 1 degre from 
beach. Lbz-car pone tiled rec. 
room, water “fruit trees. 
FE 5-6012 
FOR COLORED, 3 BEDROOM, 
dining room, front room, kitchen 
and bath ‘ow down payment, 
quick possession. Cal) from 9 to 
®, FE 3-058.   
  
Suburban Living __ 
At Its Best future home 
(CONVE ERTIBLE. 24) bedrooms 1 
W. WwW. ROSS HOMES OR 3-8021 
BY OWNER MODERN 5-ROOM 
home in Ward's Orchard. Lot site 
60x120. $1500 down. FE 4-3874. 
OXBOW LAKE, 3 BEDRM., 3 BATH, 
a ‘eae lakefront. $23,900. EM 
Templeton Ward's Orchard 2 bedroom, 1 extra =o e, 
peted living room, nice 
ng room and kitchen, full base- 
ment’ Nearly new oi] fired fur- 
nace. A steal at only $8,960. Rea- 
sie Tal down payment. 
kK. L. Templeton, Realtor 2339 Crchare Lk. Rd. PE 44563 
_After 6, FE 2-9502 
Bateman 
Kampsen MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE   
  
Lge 
WOULD YOL 
like to own a lovely 3 bed- 
room home with full base- 
ment, attached breezeway, 
2. car brick garage. Beau- 
tiful large lot with tower- 
ing shade trees? Would you 
cour a en out the 
back door a few steps to 
take a dip i ne our 
finest lakes — Elizabeth 
Lake? Need we tell you 
more. Only $19,050. 
THE MISSING 
INGREDIENT... we feel is you! Bverything 
else is included in this nee 
3. bedroom | 
breeseway 
rage. Pull basement, — 
lent recreation room 
fireplace. Carpeting. 2 “pull 
baths and many other fea- 
tures. Priced only $18,950. 
STOP THE PRESSES Here's the value that harks 
back to days of Lop Only 
$2,550 down — ay- 
ments like rent. This fe 
suburban, new, 6 room 3 
bedroom, brick with “full 
  We're glad to assist you with your 
BROWN $700 DOWN — Lake front. 3 bed- 
room bungalow and you can move 
immediately. Ol! furn. Large lot. 
      500. Enjoy lake living here.’ Priced 
fF at only $9,500. 
$500 DOWN — Large 8 rm. mod- 
etn home that needs painting 
“Ideal for large family." Located 
near St. Fred's. Priced at ofily 
$5,500, 
NOTHING DOWN — G.I. Special. 
Two homes and two ser Rent 
‘LAKE FRONT Clean a 
re Full basement. Good garage. 
arge lot. Priced at only $13,000. 
“Worth the money.’ 
fee SELL OR TRADE — love- 
v 3 bedroom bungalow. pniy 4 
ears od. Gas furn. Alum. storms 
st. 
lyn area. 
land contract or 
“Ask for Mr. Brow 
$1,000 DOWN — Little farm. 
most two acres with 24 x 32 
ft. home. Two car ger. Fruit, 
berries & etc. Priced at only 
, 
$20,000 SELL OR TRADE — 20 
acre farm with 6 rm. modern 
e, barn & other agro 
Tractor’ and all tools. 
leaving state.” Will 
cheaper home. 
$24,500 BRAND NEW BRICK & 
STONE RAN cue ‘hc ten 
acres of land. A custom 
built home curetally pincned with | 
thoughts toward comfort a: con- 
venience as well as Gauci de- 
sign. It offers the most. 
pletely carpeted. 1% baths. 
auto. washer, dryer, oven & range 
Birch ¢ 
rubbed finished. A large two car 
with pboard and closet car, 
oe 
Al- 
ccaae for 
eppointment only.”' 
LIST WITH US — For fast & 
efficient service. WE BUY, SELL 
& ADE. 20 yrs. serving Pon- 
& Vicinity. Open 9-9. 
H. BROWN, Realtor 2407 Elizabeth — rose 
Ph. FE 4-3564 2-4810 
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 
DORRIS BEAUTIFUL COLONIAL 
WEST $17,550 
A wonderful family home in the 
perfect location for the children, tiac 
L. 
  
  
. fireplace, 2 tile 
screened porch 
overlooking lake, lots of 
closets FA of] heat, chy 
water & sewers. $37,500; 
Terms. 
ROY ANNETT. INC. BEALTORS 
2 Huron B&tree 
Open Evenings; & a beneay 1-4 
FE, 8-0466 FOR COLORED — Sata! $7,000. poe   
Cpen Evenings & ae 
FOR SALE OR RENT $7,350 Tope 
On Porter road, 10 miles west of 
ome Near M59 bedroom 
home on 2 seres with basement. Burry! Vac 
CSCHUETT. Realtor FE 8-0458   
  THE ANSWER TO 
YOUR PROBI.EM: 
Want Ads! To sell, rent, 
hire, it's FE 2-8181. 
      “e only stone's throw from a private 
privileged lot to beauti- 
ful Sylvan Lake, ideal for city 
schools, or Catholic. Numerous 
appointments vou will siaee = 
clud replace, full bath 
th igh dry Saccanent. 
screened in lene, and attached 
cee a erit S see. are proud to 
ave 
COUNTRY ESTATE 
SIX ACRES 
A modernized farm home that. be- 
speaks the grace of yesterday, 
—- of seven spacious and 
jas rooms, oak floors and 
red wails throughout, mod- 
kitchen 14x15. all 
re 
|e running water, located North 
at tiac $18 950. Terms. 
PRETENTIOUS HOME WOODWARD & SQUARE LAKE 
In this ve exclusive location 
+ we are offe a beautiful brick 
ranch with over 1700 sq. ft. 
of living area, all the selling ap- 
ments demanded by today's 
most discriminating buyer, at- 
tached 2-car garage with magic 
eye d . Se! ey room 4 
poll ect. 14x24 family room 
two full ceramic tile path. 
Priced to sell 
GI. SPECIALS Beautiful 3 vedroom home off Baldwin, full basement, dandy ga- 
rage, two large ‘ots. Large 
six room home across from ye a 
fellow school, basement. “good ¢ 
dows $7500. Mortgage, cost only 
own boards galore all hand |             basement. Large lot on the 
hehe side. See this home 
now 
GI's | Nothing Down 
IMMEDIATE 
POSSESSION 
EAST SUBURBAN Freshly decorated through- 
out with full en and 
om. kitchen. Lots of ex- 
tras. A hotse that you will 
feel at home in... . only 
; with low “va pay- 
ment. Move neha in. 
! 
CRESCENT LAKE beter lake privileges. 
cozy room 
oe only a few blocks 
ced-in lake park. One 
=) our best values at $8,750. 
Only mortgage cost down at 
$53.44 per month plus taxes 
and insurance. . 
FE 4.0528 —REALTORS— 377 8. TELEGRAPH OPEN EVES. 
“SMITH” OTTER LAKE—BRICK RANCH 
Large living room with 
ledgestone replace & beau- 
tif view picturesque 
Otter Lake. 3 ample bed- 
rooms, 1% baths & family 
Toom prov.de ideal 
conditions. Built - 
fast bar in this modern 12x 
12 kitchen. Forced warm air 
as heat 2 car garage. 
arge lot. The owner of 
this choice residence will en- 
ep = ne oe on Otter 
boat access to 
Sylvan ake Shown by 
appointment. $24,650. Terms. 
ELISE re LAKEFRONT 
bedroom home. La T se 
motes k For Sale Houses 6 EAST BOULEVARD 
  4 home: small’ price. 96.80 wae, Must or 
AIRPORT & 
Ser ay eka at $0500. $1,800 
‘Paul io Jones Real Est. - 
FE. 4-8550 PE 8-1275 
Nothing Down)? Wl build home on your 
lot. — or your a 
Basemen Also cluded. — 
Bling “A s Bee our model. Don 
3- ea 
  pest 
Near ONLY Ra. & Sash abaw 
Y $95 DN. mete eutomatic heat, nice- 
ly decorated on about 1 
sk 
KEITH G. STEGWART 
Custom Buildi 
ATTRACTIVE STONE trimmed, white frame home 
on landscaped acre setting—near 
new MSU. Beautiful ar- 
ranged, EIGHT ROOMS and cer- 
amic bath. Carpeting and drep- 
eries included in the 24 ft. Hv- 
ing room. Pamily room with nat- 
at fireplace, extra 2 bath. Ideal 
living for your family—call now 
to see. $24,950, the price is right! 
BEAUTIFUL... LOCATION — Seltéct established 
Se of sine ereee or) 
Huntoo Con-   
    
(Good fishing on ae lake too). 
ean HO 60x42 with 3 bed- 
30 ft. family room and 
24x13 %e ft. i room with fire- 
lace. carpeare and draperies 
ncluded utdoor grill in the 
fenced enclosed lawn. Let us show 
you es lovely home—so much to 
ni he $21,000 asking price is 
r 
WATKINS 
LAKE... VACANT 3 bedroom home, com- 
letely furnished. A=Boat house 
oo, with large room overhead. 
Knotty pine walls. 25 ft. glassed 
<neceene rch. Big lot. 45 by 
approx. ft. Here's your op- 
portunity to buy a lakefront prop-. 
erty f down, full wre 
$12,500. or $2, 
Humphri 83 =(N.~ a oi Open Eves. 
. 2-9236 _wounens LISTING SERVICE 
R SALE OR RENT. 3 BEDROOM —— with privileges on Union 
eee, oe furnace. 
oe with § 00 down. OR 
2796 or OR ease ‘evenings and 
ALL  IODEAN J BEDROOM HOME 
with low down pe ment. Imme- 
sunt, possession. OR 3-7385. 
6 PLEX, ROOMS. 
eNnithiela School. FE 
PONTIAC, HERRINGION } Sub. 422 Bay. 3 Bedroom brick ranch. Full basement. Ai 
rirged & eee Be 
r cent mo ” 
_&'sun. Fe 8-2800. ~ BY OWNER 4 BEDRM, 1% STORY 
frame home, 3 lots. 1% car ga- 
tage. 14x18 workshop. PE 5-3564. 
MODEL HOME 
$7995 $495 DOWN NO OTHER CLOSING COST 
OPEN   
    3 BED- 
3-8876. 
  
        DAILY & SUNDAY 
2 8 1.M. 
OAKLEY PARK COMMERCE LK. 
J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 86 E. Walton 
—_ home 
eee heat. 
LAKE 0 
H.C. ‘NEWINGHAM Corner Auburn-& Crooks Rds. 
UL _2-3310 
     
      home. 16x20 ft. livin 
try style kitchen 
ipboa 
approximately 6 acres 
tillable land./ Price |ncludes 
small barn, co crib & other 
outbuildings Ss bome is only 
6 years old. 
$600/ Down 
of town. 
orms “ screens. Fi- 
      FE $1983) " 4-3844 
Open 9 a.n. to 8:30 p.m. _ Sanaa 1-5   
nook. Dining room, living 
room witt fireplace. Glasse 
in heated sunroom, 
baths ft. stone a 
facing the lake — 
frontage. $35,000. Term 
Rolfe H. Smith, 
244 8 Telegraph Rd. 
OPEN Realtor 
E 3-7848 ENINGS TIL a 
John K. 
Irwin & SONS 
3 Nice Homes In / 
Colonial Hills: / 
2 bedroom ranch on b 
porch anc attached gorse 
attractive $18,900. 
3 bedrooms, full basement, recre- 
ation room, breezeway and nl 
garage. $16,750. 
| ut eee, vote bilevel 2 baths, 
ie ar gara ery mod- 
erm throughout. £ $28 00. 7 mee . 
John K. Ewin & Sons neslroee 
one 1925 
313 West Huron St. 
Phone FF 5-0447 or FE 2-4031 
Evenings FE 5-4846 
    
PLACE A “LOST” AD. 
| Call FE 2-8181 for an ad 
28181 for an ad writer. 
    DORRIS alt 1 OON Be REALTORS 
182 W. econ 
an Say “charge it.” 
Phone FE 41880 | ig lot, 
. Very | NORTH /END BEAUTY 
cellent = “1 block off Jos- 
@ OR 4-0306, J.A. Taylor, 
   
     WA RFORD TOWNSHIP Bargain 
Vv sh 2 bedroom rancher 
living m, 2 car 
arage. Extra large lot. FHA 
pproved, an $12, og $1, = 
‘down. J. 
Taylor, Realtor.   
| MILLER ees — & PERSON- 
st 7 miles _— of city off 
sq. 
in this attractive 6-room a 
ranch built in 1957 on 
lot. The 31 ft. livin 
carpeting, drapes b 
corps 13 ft. modern. kitchen, 
ms, and think of 
smallest is 13x11 ft. 
cedar 
gara age. Owner lesving ‘town and must sell this week — Cail for 
appointment 
4 BEDROOMS Elizabeth Lake Es- 
ted living 
' piso dno cae fen 
_ also av lake on = HLA, Z 
ARE YOU LOOKING rom A 
HOME with gas heat? 3 bed- 
rooms, large kitchen, brand new 
carpeting, alum. storms and 
screens, water softener, — 
ft. lot. Spick & span through 
and all on one floor wtb oi vis00 | 
down payment and only 4m 
including taxes & arenes. vee ¥ 
| so call us for details 
to recover a loss, Dial FE. William Miller 
Realtor wht 2-6263 | 
  pn mg 
, leges Lake trolled. "beach tor the kiddies. 
  ———— Commerce Rd. to 8. 
Commer Rd. ft to oske? 
Park Rd Right law 
left 2 Dlocks to model. Watch 
for sig! 
E. Walton _—s__s*FE: ‘88-0441 HOME OR ripple eee ae eee 
Zoned commercail with Mig 
Available on 
RION — bedroom shell 
aoe _ gethiun down at $30 
““KRRO G.I.’s / 
Wolverine Lake privileges. 2 
troom home plus a den 
be third : 
Large 15x21 ft. living 
. ent. car 
garage. Sox317 ft. let. 
akefront / wi rooms. This old¢r home 
is pal an. =< icely 
h . etely 
fomes < ar sivine lus 
dinin, sree 4 ca. e. * 
tric heat eer $12,500.. 
Acres 
With @ large 3 b pier, 3 oh ‘Maceday ‘oeivie -orivleess 
ull price $5,306. oR 
  
ROOM Mi @OME, 
Bouts in porch. 23 rm, guest 
2 car garage. With work- 
space. 1 ic ae = 
Prult trees, 
secn coyune Th ee reg Bivd. 
HOYT OTTAWA HILLS Lovely 3 bedroom brick Snape 
with carpeted ving room 
dining room Fireplace. Pull. 
basement. Garage. Nice land- 
scaped lot In very convenient 
location. $17,900 E-Z terms can 
be arranged 
NORTH SIDE Lecated on 100 ft. landscaped 
lot. This newly decorated home 
is @ rea: bargain that should 
be given your consideration. Full 
basement. Gas heat. New 2 car 
- garage. Carpeted living room. 
Aluminum storms & screens. $12,- 
150 with terms. 
“SYLVAN VILLAGE This 3 bedroom ‘prick ranch has 
lots of   
  lots -— lots of | room, 
extras, lots of rage — lots 0 
carpe of aded and 
kenced — lots of screened 
and just lots of value. 
fae tee is 7 type of house you 
are for and like swim- 
mi and ane — let us show 
you! 
HOYT REALTY FE 2-9840 FE 2 
254 S. Telegraph Rd.   
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE. 
GAYLORD LOG RANCH HOME 
With large room and lots of win- 
dow overlooking the three acres 
of land. Where you can have rid- 
ing horses 
DO YOU WANT TO LIVE ON THE 
WEST SIDE 
then this 2 bedroom bungalow 
home s the place. The nefghbors 
are best you can get and 
will make you feel welcome, 
HANDYMAN HOME 
with his . work: in th 
ment, Nice yard with lots of shade tree 8 under and 
onderful meal his 
wife can cook in her nice kitchen. 
THE MRS. HAS IDEAS 
About her new home and we've 
es ® house on one of 
est streets that 
ideas. 
ge 
Ste just w 
a ble 
LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD 
E: Pike St n Eves. 
9693 FE 8- 
—— Halt pa: 136 
  
  —ASSOCIATE BR 
Investment Company, 
443 ‘ORCHARD LE. A AVEAFE t 
SoYLVAN LAKE /- has 
level 
oe   
rwood — Sam Wa: 
new ~_ bedroom brick Ps 
ranch home. Ppa 
2-car rage, 
sere peinao i 
r, 
  
peti arble 
farses. 3 Near MBU . $23,500. OL 
  iF 
Your Choice Stove, reftig. or dinette 
in the no/down BEDRM. FULL B : HOME 
1 located: 
39), CAMERON — 
$99" MOVES. YOU"I IN! /Mo. PA — 
/ Inc. taxe: japon ba 
«, R. Wilson Realty 
/ EM 3-6556 
  
- NO 
/ MONEY DOWN Will build a starter home on your 
lot, any size. Full basemen’ 
Rough * Your plang oF ours. OR 3- 
RUSS McNAB ART MEYER   
' Partridge 18 THE “BIRD” TO SEE 
Cheaper Than Rent Only $66 per month inc. taxes 
and ein A See Basch 
new home arge 
Waterford High. 3 yrs. 900 
down and anyone can take over 
r cent’ GI mortgage with 
Partridge 
OPEN TIL 9 
  AS A GROUP OF BUILDERS WH 
offer low prices through volume 
as y 
Built’ homes—so0 . We'll se- cure mortgage. No obligation, 
Builders Exchange FE 3-7210 or . UL 32-3466 
IRWIN GEORGE R. 
NORTH SIDE 
3 bedroom bungalow with at- 
tached breezeway and 2-car 
& oven. Carpeted 1 
2 lots. Fenced. Excellent location. 
Excelient home. 
WALLED LAKE AREA 
3 bedroo pe brick bun.   
  
ed breezseway 
ar age. Has full base- 
ment, with attomatic heat 
hot water. Nicely landscaped 
grounds and ideally located 
NORTH END 
} be . frame home with oak 
loors, stered wails, automatic 
heat enced is with berries, 
Only $9,600 with 
GEORGE R. IRWIN, REALTOR 208 W. WA N E 3-7883 
_MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 
____ Income | Property 7 
WEST SIDE, 2 FAMILY, Pd ROOMS 
tach, $16,900. _ FE 5- 
Lake Property - 8 ee ~~ 
  LL ELECTRIC 3 BEDROOM 
gray brick, fal) basement, water 
ner, built-in ‘a } 100 f 
vate beacn $14 
sell Property. 
_or_some trade_ 
  ~ CASS - toca bor more sun Fill aggre 
Nice beac 
    to 
Sa for this" of one. fe or ere 
Paul M. Jones, Real Est. a2 W. Huron 
i fo 4-8550 
CASS LAKE WOODS | Lake B g's es tna ig Leros baese- 
Ge rage, Dri Renmeres 4 
rgie M 
NI 3-5603~ . Low down y 
  bd 
  
  
  
¢ 
     
  
      
  _? tivig ee jF 
  
  
  your rty, give us a call; 
and we will giad to discuss 
i with you. 
to hear from you, 
soon. 
Yours Truly, 
HAGSTROM | ; 
REALTO Highland Rd (359) | 
Peeuee, Mich. OR 4-0358) 
HARVEY ees PRIVILEGES — 
ft. living room, eth es garage 
i500 with Pra 
STEELE REA ALTY, 135 Highland 
Rd. —. at Milford Rd, SHigh- 
land, Michigan, MUtual 4-2 42045. 
“INDIAN LAKEFRONT | home. Beautiful:   
  
Room for third an balcony. 35) 
  ruit trees. Many evergreens 4 | 
weep willows. Good sand breach! 
or ¢l nm. Owner Texas bound. 
  562 S. Lapeer Rd. MY - 2311)   LIKE NEW LAKEFRONT BUNGA-| 
LOW Three Lakes cnt — 
excellent view. Natural cut stone | 
full basement, wand. at 
Just off M59. Screened porch 
fireplace, 
furnished 
sc . Greatly 
$10,500 cash. 
«at: Broker, 408 W. Main St.. Brighto 
Phone AC eee or AC 17-2271. 
Open Sundays. j 
Lakefront 
Loca on one Oakland Cou 
Pa s larger lakes - beautiful ramb- 
brick ranch home. Lage. 
room with fireplace. 2 spa- 
cious bedrooms. Knotty pine den. 
Pull basement with extraordi-| Large 
reduced for 
  
trees. Convenient | plenty of shad 
own by appoint- 
it ee WILLIS M. BREWER JOSEPH F. REISZ, Sales Mgr. 
* wes E. Huron St. FE 2-5181 
West of Pontiac, high and dry, Eves FE 86-0823 
LAKE LOT 90190". NICELY LAND- 
on Schoolhouse Lk. 
wa 
mod   
  LAKEFRONT 
2 acres on small lake, near Pon- 
tiac airport. $3,000 full yee, 
Paul M. Jones. Real Est. 832 W. Huron 
PE 4-8550 
OPEN HOUSE | 3 new brick 3 bedroom horres,   
  
  
      HAYNER 
at/|COUNTER PARTS   
  
Separate eating Plants. 1 
large ton room with 
private Office. | Plenty of storage 
space te Pp 
Terms.   
      NED MANUPACTUR 
Industrial bldg. approx. 
He floor space. New! ING 
j 8000 sq. 
i Wired for 
i — vy motors. New office section. 
, = ighland-Milford area. Terms. 
AUBURN RD 
sale (Frontage. Zoned Business 
‘ae Walton FE 8-0441 | 
pte oo i Bhi PARCELS 
| ations near Milford, 
Higiiana re White Lake area. 
STEELE REALTY, 135 mene 
Rd. (M-59) at Milford Rd., Hig 
land, Michigan, MUtual 4.2045" 
Rent, | Lease. Bus. Prop. 17 ~   
| 
STORE CORNER ELIZABETH AND 
Cass Lake Roads —38 x 60 ft. 
with 800 sq. ft. ef storage room. 
Wonderful location. Good for an 
business. FE 4-4423 between_12- 
__Help_ Wanted Male _ ~ 19 
ASSISTANT MANAGER 
| Branch being expanded: a brand 
| Bew opportunity for you.’ Position, 
prestige. excellent) earnings. You 
will be completely trained for this 
position now No canvassing, no 
delivering. no collecting. For in- 
terview write Pontiac Press, Box 
34.   
wanted for saiei and service 
Above average Dre for right 
man Write 8. The Pontiac 
Press, stating Gerecwens job, age 
and telept.one number, 
1. AUTO BUMPER. WE NEED A combination man for small 
ee Plenty of work and a 
benefits. Shelton Pontiac Buick. 
223, Main, Rochester. OL_ 1-8133. 
>. BOYS, VETS-TRAVEL! 18 TO 26. 
Mexico, Hawati, California, entire 
USA. and return. Anyone may 
apply a English - speaking 
-New cars furnished. 
Commission & 
riehce needed. App. 
  Durbin, Roosevelt Hotel, 10:30 
am. to 5:30 p.m. 
BAKER 
_ Exp. all arougd man. FE 3-0783. 
BA PPLY TUESDAY 
“between 6 and 9 p.m. 
calls ae pee se Morey's Galt Club, 
jon Lk     Perma-stone front. 
  'DEPEN DABLE 
‘HAYDEN, Realtor | 'Stenographer 
          G Local’ Manufacturing Co. 
GARHOPS, EXPERIENCED. AP- 
DRUG CLERK. COSMETI 
EXPERIENCED WAITRESS, MUST 
EXPERIENCED COUNTER GIRL. 
EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. 
FREE $20.95. 
steiner. ware. 
am = 
_living quarters. M 
JEWELRY SALESLADY   
    
SS CRPARLE 
For Personnel Dept. 
Pleasant Working 
Conditions 
Salary & Benefits 
REPLY 
Pontiac Press Box 107     
ply in person. Frost-Tép Drive- 
In. 3118 1 OW Huron.  «   ‘ICS. EX- 
rienced only. Apply in Oe ee 
Jnion Lake Drugs, 8050 Cooley 
Lake Rd EM_ 34134.   
be 18. rover Apply in faker De 
Lisa Restaurant, 6980 N. Roches- 
er at,   
rovided. Ex- 
ag ages 
. MI Meals and uniforms 
cellent starting © sa. 
mouse: 199 N. Punter, 
  
yrs. or older. ene tage aes bee 
_tween 1 10 a.m. 
<= FLAT 
“ey details. FE   
GENERAL HOUSE 
work. Must live aureeare 
at-More Lunch, 
GEORGES TOYS INC. NEEDS 
good toy demonstfators. Share 
out excelient reputation. Top qual- 
ity toves Enjoy adv of 
cataiog No ‘callecting.. o de- 
livery We train you. Car and 
phone necessary ‘or interview 
call. OR 3-6794. 
HOUSEKEEPER, 20 TO 50 YEARS 
old, reliable. Live in. References. 
Sta days. Own room & TV. 
WANTED. Write to   
Exveriencee preferred. 
  
Somme “AND are EXPE- 
rienced only, plenty of work, on 
_tiac Auto Body, Service. FE 4-0: 
MAN, aay 
fenéed. in light mechanical work. 
at Keego Sales and —, 
_ fee eego Harbor. 
CAB " DRIVERS. STEADY, N 
and days, age 30 or over. Apply 
1 p.m. 438 Orchard Lake Ave. 
Career Opportunity Sell auto and fire insurance on 
part time basis. If you qualify, 
you wil) be offered a full time 
career with one of the largest 
multiple line companies Call 
coln 1-7600. 
ee AGGRESSIVE 
man with no previous auto-   
  
  
  
  
  fteduced from ot. 900, from each. plop, experience sell m- 
Tieo iy $27 300 if 900. — Dodges & Loe —— il 
rate as direc c Caetabaa —_ $1,800 + gore assur ed and _ company ca car 
terf cess ur’ 
5 ue meen ——— edi Mpeg ter ee ‘and tell _ about yoursel 
a de Cass Lk. Rd. uincoin-; &nc uu think you are ca of sell. 4 or new or used 
ar r week, Write Pontiac 
Paul M. Jones, Real Est. | Press Box 4. 832 W. Huron EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNITY 
PE ¢-8550 PE 8-1275 for aggressive experienced direct 7 w m . 
SUSIN LAKE book ot home improvement back- 
bios wee & Dixie hog Bigs ground covering Oakland County. a Extr: Semi-professional field. Ideal 
rooms. Tile bath, electric; working conditions. cellent 
& =— J —— ga- nee ee ean Lt 
porta’ ration Small down payment| Mr. Howard between 10 & 12 a.m. ee lant Proo! be pee = for interview appointment. 
. Owner neoln 1- Tr EXPERIENCED BUTCHERS FOR 
MI 42635, before 10 & sfter_ 6.) “nolesale meat packing company   
STEELE. REALTY Highland Rd. (M50) at Muifora. Ra. saneal | land. Michigan MU 4-2045. 
__Sale le Resort ; Property $ 9) 
FUXNISHED BRICK CABIN   
' 
near a me tke: with privi- | 
leges on Lake. Swim ming, | 
boating bunting, fishing. UL; 
2-4218. — 
For r Sale Lots Ne Ne   
ll 
1 some BUILDING SITE NEA 
ee ea 
. Buginin x 200. Bargain! Lens rt r 
poclay ‘heres. kves. FE 
_wARGE LO? ON WILLIAMS LAKE 
Road, 1 biock from Whitfield 
Drive. Privileges on both Mace- 
‘and Williams >: A es Call after 
8:30pm OR 3-9762   
    
SEE THE NEW SITES A 
CHEROKEE HILLS OU BUY! BEFORE Y¥ 
You'll . Foll- 
ing 100 ft. sites controlled ‘to 
protect ys better homes, 
and their try lo- 
cation — Drive out Elizabeth 
Lake Rd. to Scott Lake Rd., 
turn right 3 blocks to Lacota. 
Carl W. Bird, Realtor 603 Community National Bank Bldg 
Waterford Hills Estates A er lots left. A 
size 100 250. tse” plat 
further information cal] FE 
HERBERT C. DAVIS | 415 IRWINDALE I DR. 
For § Sale Acreage 13   
    
1-5- 10-20-40-ACRE BUILDING PAR- 
cels. As low as oe dow: \ 
Realtor 
__2160 M15, Ortonville, 1 NA 7-2815 | 
~~ ACRES—ACRES _ 5 ACRES. Located on Hiller Rd, 
Excellent building location 
is ACRES, North Side location 
i= a miles from Pontiac City 
it Wil! divide. Terms. 
id a have many other no 
RILEY REAL ESTATE 508 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 
FE 41157 __ FE 4-421 
BY OWNER 
3 acres on Bay 8t. overlooking | 
      
re ee Lake. pase privileges | i 
rere ake or all; 
B 40031 -efore 5 : 
FOR SALE BY « OWNER, 40 ACRES | 
_ Melrose 4-6553. 
31 acr Soe ce a ved es loca On paved road 
close to Pontiac. 15 acres of 
rave}; 2 bedrms. nearly com- 
| exerpa home. A wonderful oppor- 
unity to combine home and busi- 
ness. Attractive terms. 
Dorothy Snyder Lay ender 
wor igkad RR & Gd. (M50) 
Phone _EM_ 3-3303 or MU 4-6417 
SELL OR TRADE. BY OWNER. # acres 575 E. Lake Angelus 
_For r Sale Farms ewe 4 
, 36 ACRES VACANT ON LAKE near “ 
Holly, — reduced. $15,000, $6,- 
ACRES, 1 SET OP BUILDIN 
50 acres in soi] bank. Near Hone, 
on Red to $25,000; 
Pasi M. Jones, Real Est. 632 W Huron 
aeemmney batidin, er 
oat aa tan’ ai 
“STATEWIDE | of Pontiac 
REALTOR | PB 4.0821 
KE RD. 7355 
50 DOWN Only: 
So reer 
Seeet, | a 
iaease Maple MA ¢6250 
  OPPORTUNITY PLUS — MARRIED 
“TOY AD | OT DEMONSTRA catering to restaurants and stores. 
Must be good boners. No drinkers. 
Furnish references in Ist letter. 
We offer good working conditions 
and over union wages Write Pon- 
_tiac Press Box 104. 
‘HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING 
salesman , Excellent opportunity 
tor right man. Janka eating & 
Air aaa repep ee 177- Edison &t. 
Ph. FE 
40445.   
4-381' days, Eves. call 
  
~ HAVE OPENING - Por 2 neat appearing men, a 
20 or over. This io on op: re 
tunity to = with a na cae 
wide com - We have a com- 
lete tra program. If you 
ve a peed to make above 
average earnings with a good 
chance for advancement then see 
me, Mr. McGinty at 80 N. Pad- 
eM Interviews are at 10 “and 6 
MARRIED | _ WITH CAR AND 
43, who is willing 
20, aot a” hours a week with 
$105 A asrbape cg to start. oan 
ven trainin rogram. rite 
Box 3 Pontiac Press,   
man 21-43 car, phone, to train 
as unit mgr. for large National 
Sales Organization. $432 a month 
oes expenses guaranteed to start. 
_Write Box 62, Pontiac Press. 
~~ SALESMEN - SALESMEN 
MONEY-MONEY-MONEY 
$120 commission per sale. 3 sales 
@ Week easy ad Pin gadegy —   
  a 1700 §. graph 8 
SHEET -METAL 
MECHANICS Proto-type hand forming and com- 
plete fabrication experience re- 
quired on aircraft and missile 
work. Class A men, $3.25 per 
hour with full overtime. 
MeGregor Mfg. Corp. W. Maple Troy 
_MI_ 4-2540 
TELEPHONE. 
CANVASSERS For modernization sa:es, good 
Serms ions: FE 2-8245 or FE 
TT 
YOUNG MEN 
TO 
ASSIST Manager in local branch in coast 
to coast chain organization. Age 
18-30 — Experience unnecessary, 
but must be able to converse in- 
telligentiy. And satisfied with $80 
per week to start. Rapid advance- 
ment to those accepted. We train 27 
you at ou e ied r expense. Car fur. 
MR. iy. ANDY 
FE 8-8013 4 
FE 8-8103 
Before 2 pm. 
Salary $80 ) Pery Week 
YOUNG MAN, 18 OR OVER. TO train for office manager. Car a | sential. $30 per week to start, 
on car allowance and weekly 
y increase. For appointmen 
call FE amu r Ood 
5.6730, __ Detroit oo ware 
Help Wanted Female 20   
WAITRESS WTD. 18T CLA ‘counter ty oe shop fae to 35. Biff bls $75 Hunter _Biva., Birminghas 
tors. 3 managers. 33 per cen | See ped collecting, as a6 imo] te orders to de- 
vestment, no . 
Week ~" 
y AVON — 1 _ WORLD ai Laat COs pct Company h 
bed portage _ a Pontiac & surto a 
| Acgend today FE 44 
Drayton on ons P.O. 
i time. No ex- | pertence. Will arts Por interview 
Pontiac Press Box 36 _¥rite 
FOR CASH IN A 
HURRY, sell things). 
through Classified Ads. to LADIES 
i ae ROOM, Pontiac Press Box 4 
WITH A PLEASANT 
voice te do telephone work from 
our office. tesa Soa on morning, 
afternoon or bal < - = Sal- 
neces- 
  
elderiy oral 
ive . 5 days. $40. P caune Press 
bie KITCHEN 
privileges. or board, for Christian 
lauy. in aren tt tor Tight, house- 
work. FE to p.m.   
. LADIES Year sround work. 4 hours day. 
Telephone canvass from our olf- 
fice. athe eplus commission. 
Call FE T1--9:30 to § p.m,   
MORE Lae ad HOME THAN WAGES, 
to live light housework and 
cooking. 7 8-6802. 
MIDDLEAGED LADY WANTED 
  REGISTERED PRACTICAL FO 
SALAD MAKER, 
SEAMSTRESS W. MUST FOR 
child care hig mothér works. 
Live in. OR_3-3077.   YR nursing home. A. aides. Write 
Pontiac Press Box 119. _ 
EXPERIENCED 
for cafeteria fast, efficient wom- 
ea Poa need not apply, MI 
Me etind be expe od ‘D ay = 
erg Clean- repairs 4 & alterations 
ers, MAple 5-3521.   TOY PARTY MGRS. AND DEMOS. 
needed all Mich. No invest- 
ment, no collecting or delivering. 
28 to 3] per cent comm. 200 ager 
wkly. check. Catalogs. Best = 
anywhere. Highest overwrite. 
12. The Pontiac BPress.   
TOY DEMONSTRATOR 
  
    ; GIRL & 
cashier. Typing shorthand es- 
sen! 40 hr. wk. Steady posi- 
tion, Barnett’s s Shop, 150 
N. Saginaw.   WAITRESSES FOR DAYS OR eg Some experience’ neces- 
Call Mars Drive-in, MI 
62778 or Bel-Aire Drive-In. LIb- 
erty 9-3177.   FOR LIG HOUSE- 
and baby ord of 1 child. 
‘or home es wages, chi.d 
wes FE 8-1578. 
WOMAN FOR HOUSE- 
oe and child care. west love 
— References. Live in. FE   
  = 
smother wo 
8-4476 WOMAN OVER 35 TO 
care for 9 yr. old twins, while 
days. $20 wk. FE 
  
w 
we 
Ww 
P 
    Anything goes! Dial FE 
28181. | ~ WTD WAITRESS KITCHEN HELP 
YOUNG acne 
rE &2 
SECRETARY — For manufacturers 
and 
SECRETARY — 18 plus, 
OFFICE DOWNTOWN — Wants a 
BOOKKEEPER—Full charge. Able 
ASSISTANT BOOK: 
MANAGER TRAINEE — Tall. 
COLLEGE GRAD — nnd 20-26 with 
' $08 Ponting Stats mia ee, Bank Bice. WIVES 
Are you resding this column be- 
cause your husband's income 
won't quite stretch? Rather han 
gotns work yourself, 1} us 
eeogel his income. one, OR 
noon-9 p.m. and I'll 
pi hg a appointment to see | 
both of you in your home. 
& curb eirls. Moheburger Drive 
in Just North of Waterford on 
Dixie Hwy 
TD.: HOUSEKEEPER. MIDDLE 
aged. 25-50 years. No laundry. 
Own apt. with bath. No smoking 
or drinking: 2 adults. Someone 
who can go away to a lake cot- 
tage on vacation for 2 weeks. 
12. wk. Write Pontiac Press Box 
  OMEN — BIG MONEY SPARE- 
time. Sensational New Apparel 
Party Plan. We deliver, Collect. 
Free Sample Line. Beeline Fash- 
ions, Bensenville 166, Illinois. | rn ee ape 
ANTED LADY FOR LIGHT 
housework, someone neat and re- 
liable— Live in, 6-year-old boy, 
nice nem $20. weekly, FE 40571     
| (POUR) is 0 
over to work 4 hou 
from our office, taking 
or cL 18 OR 
ede day; lephone 
fer appointment, one 
_ Help Wanted 
MIDWEST 
representative, good typ 
able to take dictation. § days. 
$26) per mo. 
who can 
type and take shorthand for down- 
town office $225. to start. 
girl 18-30 who can type 50 wpm. 
5 days. $200 to start. P 
to do monthly ib gre and take 
compete charge of books, $350 to 
a 
KEEPER Age 
%-35 with bookkeeping background 
oy pines type occasional letter. 
tractive = to train as branch manager for nattonal chain. 
FOR MEN 
ARTS MAN — Experience mechanical parts. $525. a eee 
~ in busines, poral arte > i 
in management orenran 
MIDWEST TEPER FO! FOR SMALL BUSI- 
_38412 ° 
at |.     
when I'm ordering, my 
I suggest     TM, Reg, U.S, Pat. Of, / 
© 1989 By NEA Gervice, ine, 
  “Freddie’s always worrying about me—my _ Weight 
lack of exercise when 
a cab!” 
  
21 Yu 
ARTHUR MURRAY OPEN 
a new studio in ontiac Zand 
need junior executives & Atach- 
Tee training for t who _____Nelp V Wanted 
pleasant surrounding 
zs work. rE Law taken 23 
“at . Lawrence be- 
& 6 p.m. Aug. ird. 
Not’ b Ratere. "ptudio closed for va- 
cation. 
COUPLE TO HELP CARE FOR 
semi-invalid in aeons - for rent 
_and utilities. FE 4 
DIRECT SELLING — Sas 
red hot item, brand new in     
  
n. 30 to 50 per cent mis- 
the. a oe § ROUTE 
erage $2.50 r br. 150 N. Perr 
8:30 to 11:40 a.m »     
Peseta aNtaadtret se 
investment pdr dr Call 
or 5. 
Opportunity Is Knocking If you rocnangees Unser financial 
security now, retirement in 
<roe Call FE 4-0738 for. inter- FE 
  
  
  RASPBERRY PICKERS. NORTH- ron — oa Se Ledge par bacon pan 
a ay. e a 
_and Friday. f 
REAL ESTATE TE SALESMEN aap 
salesladies. Due to expansio 
need help tn our Somers fee. 
a 
foe AGENCY 609 E. Plint MY 3-1143, FE 8-2306 
SALESMAN OR SALESWOMAN. 
Experienced or will : Gee if oth- 
erwise qualified. Ted 
Mecullougb Sr. FE 3050, Arro 
_Realiy .     
  
Employment Agencies 22 
EVELYN 
EDWARDS   
RECEPTIONIST ...... mcrae $175 
Local Hospital. . 
PBX RECEPTIONIST ........ $210 
Busy board experience. 
DR.'s RECEPTIONIST ....... $225 
Aged 21-35. Local. 
LIBRARY AIDE ..... seesese. $325 
2-4 Years college. 
GENERAL OFFICE .......... $200 
Local retail store’ 
| FIGURE” CLERE | «22: iscces $325 
Purchasing department experience 
TYPIST ......>. MOE mee $250 
IBM Executive typewriter experi- 
ence. 
RECEPTIONIST ...... veveese $225 Must. wear glasses, 
BILLING CLERK. .............$235 Posting. 
BOOKKEEPER cee $396 NCR -3100 Experience. 
veeeees $250 BOOEKEEPE R 
Aged 21-35 — Loca} 
BOOKKEEPER... covewsve 9430 
Full charge. Payroll. Shorthand. 
Heavy office background 
JUNIOR STENO 
Lite shorthand and typing. 
ast eE ey TYPIST 2... 
Type — Shorthand 88. 
NURSES AIDE 
Experienced. Local. 
EVELYN EDWARDS VOCATIONAL 
UNSELING SERVICE co 
24" san HURON SUITE 4 
FE FE 4-1429 
“MIDWEST 
Employment 406 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 
FE 5-9227 
Instruction. 23 ; Oe rw 
PRIVATE MATH TUTORING FE 45614 
Work Wanted Male 2 24 
6 FT. HUSKY WANTS WORK x ANY 
kind. Have car & tools for most 
apes $1.50: hr. UL 2-3584 or FE 
4-5271.   
  
  
  
  
TYPES CARPENTRY. FE _2-4855   
  Work Wa ed Female 25 25 ~~ 
     
  
    
  
Eh RS i rege 
E, BILED 
ley~ St. 
Foe L 
“3 gp Pn, wat 
NCE SERVICE i OY'S. 96 Oakland . PE_2-4021 
Dresemak’g & & Tailor'g 30 30   
  
    FURN i TURE NEEDED odd to ‘the Entire or its. Get 
a rv. Will outright or 
sell 1t for you. Community 
_Sale. ‘hone OR 2- ie ie: nde 
SUN =} Fe = MA 5-134 
WiLL LIQUIDATE YOUR HOUSE- hold goods   
  
  
PLOWING, ORs GRADING, 
T1$ Scott ane doo ee rete or OR 3-0165 
WARNER'S ROTO-TILLIN AND 
vacant lot mowing. FE cat 
Laundry Service > ___ 34 
MILY LAUNDRY PAM 
Shirt service. 
540 68. Telegrase i 
    
Service = 
28105, 
Landscaping 35 
A-! MARION AND KY. BLUE 80D. Deliveries mad : 2601 ets fed OL or — pe up.   
  
  
    4-1 ACE Sa RE 
a and "irae PE 2-7188 oF FE ake our ta. 
Dom KINDS OF LAWN WORK. 
ish grading. Top soil. ora sas ee 
COMPLET LANDSCAPING. 
tree ieeeoal ot trimming. 
Scott Lk. Rd. PE 4-4228 or on 
3-0165. 
LAWN BUILDING AND REPAIR. 
Complete lawn service. Lawn cut- 
  
  
    either by private sale ALTERATIONS, or public suction. c. z eC ye a expertente. +E ter, Michiga 1-5631.. 
DR , TAILOR : RESSMAKING. TAILORING AL Wanted “Miscellaneous: 46 
G TAILORING AL. TYPEWRITER, ADD- ferations. drapes & Formals done HAVE yOnine. or piece of of- ‘ q : FE ped furniture or, equipment | net 
COVERS DRAPEs. in’ use? We will buy these ite oo tory ye Bt ee OR 3-9767. oe 
eves. Pick’ up up & pty Wanted to ‘Rent _#& ___ Garden arden Plowing 31 | RENT OR LEASE 3 OR 4 « PEDRM 
house by Aug. 29, west side. FE 
8-6682. 
MAN ON P.M. 
MmppUEAGED & board with 
rage preferred Write Pontiac 
_ Press dox x 10. 
‘Share Living ng Quarters 4 49 trainin 
WTD. LADY TO ee come: 
Evenings only, FE 5-8 
Wtd. Contracts, Mtge 51   
ABILITY To sell your land contract at the 
lowest ible discount — is @ 
serv: d: McCullough has. given 
for many years. Also cash for 
ptesd — Mortgages avail- 
CASH BUYERS WAITING : 
No obitention Call any hour. FE 
4-3844 or FE 5-9975. 
ARRO REALTY 
ABSOLUTELY THE, PASTEST AC- 
your land contract. Cash 
b ers waiting. Call Realtor Part- 
_tidge. PE 4   
  
    
  
L. 3 C LOSETS. 5 ze ‘ALL ej a" heats 
oy: See wae 4:30 Pinegrove. 
ROOMS AND BAT H. war SIDE, 
_all util. il. FE 4-4686. ° 
4 7 ROOMS — BATH, FURNISHED. 
7 Ona 3 BED- L. PAID. 
. _rooms, 52 oi. irre 5-2438. 
7 ROOMS lag PT. YOR ADULTS. 
§ ROOM aE = PARTIALLY PURN. ee een PE 2-2825 or       
  
  
€10.06 WEEKLY .3 ROOMS, PRI- vai< bath and entrance, i child an ‘egec welcome. Apply 804 St. 
AVAILABLE: iMMEDIATELY. Ss 
bath teat & laundr ferret 
ities. 9414 8. Anderson, MI 4-1456. 
ATTRACTIVELY FURNISHED 4 
room ar Pvt. bath, laundry 7m.   
  Garage varied & Lois. Pon- 
tiac. are 1-1875. 
BASEMENT er 2 OR 3 MEN. 
_Nice locality FE 3-7308.   CLEAN. SMALL, NICELY URN. 
with garage. §90 E. Walton. 
COUPLE, ACREAGE, RENT FREE 
to board owner. FE 4-0086_after 4. 
CENTRALLY LOCATED TO FAC- 
tories. 2 amphezes girls or couple. 
Adults only. Alberta Apts. 290 N. 
Paddock. 
FURNISHED 3 ROOM APART- 
Closed-in sun porch, 
ground private drive and 
entrance Utilities furnished. Year 
around = e noe. Couple only.   
  
  
NEAR FISHER BODY. Y. KITCHEN, 
living, bedroom combination, 
Bath, util, $12.50 a week, OR 
3-7206. : 
NEWLY DECORATED. D. PVT. 3 RMS. 
& bath. Child welcome. Call aft- 
er 5 p.m. 421 N. Perry St. 
SYLVAN LAKEFRONT |° Buitable for couple or individual. 
Reasonable. Call FE 4- C877. 
  
  -3581. 1050 W. Huron.| UPPER 3 -RMS. FURN. PVT. 
ee wake we HOUSEWORK. 5| - ting and maintenance. MI 6-4109. > TOP bath & ent, 162 Augusta. UL 2-2752 
LANDSCAPING, SODDIN WE BUY, LIST BELL CON- | _ °F wo Desmees EN) puans Plee anincie ve of any size, located | WOMAN. PRIVATE BATH AND 
| ede penl ee ee | ee wanymnere in, Michigan. ig | entrance. FE_4 4-2847. 
a 5 - | WESTSIDE. A TIVE 2 RMB. 
Y ee eS Ret. av yaliesie if rs- | § ' Moving & : Trucking 36| STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE | WESTSIDE. in Tae aaa | STE B. Telegeape | PE, 52) conditianed, utilittes furn.| Only 
MIMESGRAPHING, AYPING, SEC-/ 1-A Reduced R ’ | CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS. | $65 mo. for right couple. 
eeterms serve =e ‘A Keduced Kates GASH anwelt, 4540 Dixie Hwy.| Phone FE 5-262 unt) 5. FE REGISTERED ‘1 SEDICAL ASS Locai or long distance gree e OR 3-1355 ‘| 5-5942 after 5. ~ 
So ee pe a ee IMMEDIATE a procedures. y- = i . 
fat emt eaten FE 6-2458 ACTION |. | Rest Ante Untwnee’   
REG. NURSE. PREFER HOME 
case, FE 5-0023. 
ase oa AND IRONING. 
#0 war SITTING & Paget 
in Crescent Lk. area. FE 8- 
WORKING IN A SaSTAURANT 
or clerk in cleaners. FE 8-6823. 
WOMAN DESIRES DAY WORK 5 
rete week. Go home nights. FE   
  
  
  
    
Beles Soe 
‘AAA CEMENT CONST. 
Sidewalk & Driveway Seay and bonded. FREE esti- _m FE 43371 or FE 45-0833 
A-1 Stock. BRICK AND CEMENT 
work, Residential and commer- 
wpe Call MY 
‘aples. Guaran-   
We jare, lt 
3-1128 
teed eae 
A-1 BRICK AND CEMENT WORK. 
We specialize in porches, chimney. 
All work guaranteed. Cal} any 
time. §-2684. 
4-1 CEMENT AND BLOCK WORK. 
Also repairs: OR 3-0464. 
A-l SAND FINISH. FE 5-3722. 
« Pontiac Eoavesd, Floor Service. 
re 1 BRICK BLOCK AND CEMENT work Also onder OR 3-9402. 
= KINDS = sa WORK,   
  
  
    ASHES ae TRASH HAULED. Level & heavy trucking. FE 
HAULING & RUBBISH. NAME 
your price, Any time. FE 8-0095. 
LIGHT HAULING 
__ FE 4-0031   
  
LIGHT HAULING. REASONABLE 
rates. FE 8-1266 
$2 A HAULING AND RUBBISH 
load, any time. FE 4 0264. 
LIGHT AND HEAVY Seocking. 
Rubbish, fill dirt, top soil, sand, 
[olay and front end loading FE 
Trucks to Rent UCKS TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT 4%4-Ton Pickups l%-ton Stakes 
Dump_ trucks Semi-Trailers 
Pontiac Farm and 
Industrial Tractor Co. 825 8. WOODWARD FE 4-1442 
Open Daily bi g Sunday 
O’DELL CARTAGE Local and long distance moving. 
Phone FE 5-6806 
UNWANTED ARTICLES | PICKED up free of charge. FE 5-4638 
Painting & Decorating 37 
18T CLASS PAINTING AND es   
  
  
loidt   
  
  
  
    ry ae a BERV- pois: Cash or terms. U 
Gwaun CONSTRUCTION CO a DECORATING. PAINT MA_ or OA 83272| ing and wallpapering. FE 4-0255. 
DoBULLDOZING & TRUCKING  |A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR. DON TUR: FE 5-2853 Papering. FE 8-0343.   
BLOCE ao yop FE_2-2 A-1 PAINTING INT. & EXT. REAS. 
FE 4-5206 or OR Sadi.   BREAKWATERS | A} aD? CEMENT 
work of al) kinds. tree estimates. 
PE 8-3785, ML 2-1443. 
bp otis BLOCK, STONE & CE- 
ent work Residential, & Com- 
EM 3-3168   
  tmercial Bill. 
BLDG. REPAIR PLASTERING 
Puce block, cement .work, FE 
  
ARES — EXCAVATING — 
Lake Dredging — Trucking — 
Septic Tanks — Drain Fields in- 
stalled. Free Kstimates, OR 3-6932. 
BASEMENTS WATERPROOFED. 
Work cere Free Estimates. 
BLOCK, ma ctl WORE, 
and fireplaces FE 5- 
CEMENT 18 OUR SPECIRETY. 
Floors 3-4879.   
  
  
  8, 
CUSTOM Si ay “LICENSED 
builder. Free UL 26   A-1 PAINTING & DECORATING. 
Paper removed. FE 4-6918 
TERIOR. EX- A-1 PAINTING 1 
terior. 10 per cent disc. for cash. 
Guaranteed. Free est. FE 4-9205.   New 
or season 
isfactory inspection 
and title. Ask for Ken Templeton. 
L. Tem oe Orchard Lake R 
“fe OR CONTRACTS. TO BUY 
sell. Earl Garrels, EM 3-2511 
r EM 3-4086. 
_Wanted Real Estate 52 
100 salesmen to serve you. For quali- 
oe appraisal, and fast, reliable 
on. 
CALL 
Humphries 83 N. Telegraph Open Eves. FE pp | Realtor 
ke Rd. FE 4-4563 
  
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 
CASH MONEY 
Por nhomes, coutracts & vacant 
acreage. Or we will show you 
how to get cash, 
RILEY REAL ESTATE 
609 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. PE 4-3157 
PE 4-482 
JET CASH, a a 
on, 3-7888, iy _Open evenings & ‘sundays. 1 BEDROOM. $12 WK. 142 Ww. 
_Columbia. 
1 BEDRM. [ LIVING RM.,_ KITCH- 
Refrig. & 
Ground floor. Gas ‘heat. Bik. ott 
Commerce Rd, EM_3-4115. 
18ST FLOOR 4 AND Se OIL 
heat, good cond. $1 Mariva. 
2 & 3 RM. PVT. BATH, NEWLY 
__dec. 285 Whittemore. 
2 BEDROOM UPPER &LAT. 
Adults. 165 Chandler. 
2 BEDROOM LOWER, MODERN, 
* eon automatic oil heat and hot 
water furnished Near GMT. FE 
5-2864,   
  
  
    
  CLEAN. CHILDREN 2. BEDRM 
$60 welcome North East ee 
mo. PE 4-0000 or FE 4-758 
3 RMS. & BATH 
_ FE 4-0401 after 6 
3 RMS. & BATH PVT. ENTRANCE 
— Waterford area. $45. mo. OR 
4-0237.   
  
  TRM APT. HEAT & HOT WATER furn. — bed. Stove & Refrig. 
FE 58 
3 ROOMS AND BATH, UPPER, 
rivate entrance, Nice location. 
ecently decorated. Ideal for 
working coupie. Stove and refrig- 
erator furnished. 203 8. Marshall 
E 5-2229   
  
3. ROOMS AND BATH, $38 A 
month, heat & hot water fur- 
nished. OR 3-5754 from 9 to 5. 
3 ROOM, LOWER WITH BATH, 
util, Adults FE 2-5262. 
3 ROOM NEWLY ee 
stove, refrigerator, washing m 
chine, and utilities furnished. "313 
Secry a 230 8S. Park, in rear.     
  
  
GI AND FHA CASH FOR YOUR HOME 
Yes, we can sell your home for 
cash with very small down pay- 
ment. Call us for further infor- 
tation. Do not fee] obligated. We 
will aise your property and appr yo 
tell you the cash you ean receive 
    
  
  
  
JENSEN'S TV aenviCe _ APTER- noon & evening. Call FE 2-0495.     
  
CERAMIC T ILE FREE ESTIMATES TERMS. 
Advance Floor Co. OR 3-8701 —— rrr 
CEMENT WORK Walks Drives Floors 
. aan _ Bonded. UL 
RPENTER WORK. NEW & RE- 
pale small jobs & ‘specialty. FE 
5-2841 or FE 5-2017, 
CEMENT =i K OF ALL KINDS. 
Residential & Comm’l. Licensed, 
bonded & insured. "Raymond Ww. 
Commins. OL 1-0772. 
CEMENT & BLOCK WORK, FE 5-0782 ‘ 
CEMENT WORK NOTHING TOO 
large or small. 
ence. Free estimate. Special price. 
OR 3-6172.   
  
  
  
DRY WALL TAPING AND FINISH- 
ing Free estimate:. FE 8-6781. 
ELECTRICAL SERV. —FREE EST. 
__Partney Electric FE 5-5439 
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Con-   
  
  struction and maintenance, Ed 
Connon Electric UP 2- 
EXCAVATING — TRENCHING 
BULLDOZING _ EM_ 3-088! 
FREE—KITCHEN PLANNING — 
Call FE 5-8431. 
complete 
counter tops, 
a R. 
1060 W. Hu Headquarters for: 
kitchens, built-ins, 
sinks, dishwasher, 
=. Meate ec. Co., 
FR — ESTIMATES ON WIRING 
for Bae heaters, renee and 
dryers,. FE 5-8431. ee Munro 
Electric Co., 1060 W. 2.2762. | 
20 years experi- toeT: Upholstering 40   
  Bet :o you. 
AAA PAINTING & DECORATING. WE ADE WE BUILD 
26 years experience. Reasonable. DORRIS & SON. REALTO 
Pree | ates. Phone UL 2-1398. | 752 W Huron FE 4-1557 
PAINTING INT. & EXT. PAPER 
hanging. Mason Thompson. FE Sell Us Your Equity _ 
4-8364. berries, Cals waning Gitent: PAINTING —PAPERING ‘ Rea i Wall Washing — Paper Removal Hise Sant £395 Dixie GUARANTEED FE 2-2312 | —— : —- | WANTED: MMEDIATELY! 
Television Service 38; Homes, terms, lake property and AR me land contracts. Buyers waiting. 
DAY OR NIGHT Tv SERVICE | Paul M. Jones, a Est. FE —_ or FE oe 833 W Huron $-8550 
Rent Apts. Furnished 54 
ONE 4-RM. bets 
FE 2-1476   
EAKLE'S CUSTOM UPHOLSTER- 
Se Ay 8174 Cooley Lake Rd. EM 
ee 
FE 5-8888 
Lost & Found   
41   
LOST: Fada al 
“Shae ake. Answers to Union 
" Reward. EM 3-3380 or 
Sandan as RDAs. hund. Vic. of Orchard Lake Ratt FE Mant Reward. 
,LOST, BLACK ALE PUPPY 
with tan markings, OR 3-879. 
REWARD.   
    
  THE PERSONS WHO PICKED .UP 
the Collie dog in the city of Au- 
burn Chila's please call UL 
_-2-2332. Child's pet 
_Not'= tices & & ‘Personals 43 
= COLORS: MINUTE ° MIXING. 
wala on duty to assure the 
finish for each job. Pon- 
tine Rockote Paint. uron at 
Soe LIKE TO HELP YOU 
with your car problem—Call Ern- 
ice Felice at oF Owens FE 5-4101 
or OF 3- New Fords or all 
Kinds of A-1 used cars.   
  ~ 
  
GARAGES $505 14x22 Complete, FE 5-9122 
gee MOVING FULLY 
. PE 4-8450 L. A. Young. 
Woe GARAGE, CABINS, ADDI- 
ti 5 Licensed builder. FHA— 
. FE 5-6909.   
  AA PRIVATE DI 
't worry. 
Confidential 
ins one * Know the facts. consultation. FE 
NEED-   GIRL OR WOMAN “ing ® friendly advisor, one FE 
122 after 5 p.m.; or if no an- 
swer Fe 2-0469. C Confidential.   ~ ‘LICENSED 11 ore: 
FE   _ per 
A-l 1 PAINTER “INTERIOR AND LIGHT CARPENTER Talat & 
roofing work. OA 8-29   vexterior. Reas. 
NEW A-t) CARPENTER W PA and repair, FF 4-421 PLASTERING Oa abate — REAS 
  
A-1 PAINTING ERiON © EX- 
terior. Free oeets Reas. OR 
3-3752 or OR 3-8117 
AVAILABLE NOW CARPENTER 
and cabinet work rey 
pair. D. H. Murdock, FE oe 
BRICK | Aptian AND PingeUicaa 
ref. FE 8-4264. 
SOORREPINS ALL TAXES EMpire 3-3416 
A en MAKER A a a eciaity, FE 
CARPENTER WORK OF ANY 
_ pS ere Cal) after 6   
      
  RE “FINISHER, 
Work Wanted Female 25 
A-1 WASHING   
  
MAN DESIRES DAY ay thru y. $8 
ransportation, references. 
LADY. eo Sieg noua by gs work 
  ‘oer! 
      Pat: Lee 79 
PLASTERING, NEW | AND “REPAIR. 
Vern Keller. UL _2-1740 _ 
R. G SNYDER FLOOR: LAYING, sanding and finishing Phone FE 
  
ROOF RE EPA IR S oats EAVESTROUGHIN: p 40644 
TRENCHING - EXCAVAT On 
ic tanks Field er fi . 
attches and boat well. footings.   
  
    __ Building Ecepllez 
ete. eat Pde ntarte 
9 ft. x 5 ft. Com 
iro sesh & * ouvers. 
3904. WIN- 
ete with 
ike new. 
_Tence 8t. 
ALUMINUM oor, $100, Eh F 
ALL CLE. 
windows. Reasonable   
atipnig 6 cond. 
i and ing ice, #E. z. e¢ Ph. FE 43981. : 
Custom Asphalt 
Paving Ease nee Grading. MY 3-5821,   
  CAWNWOWERS 4% SHARPERED “AND | cose 
Outboard wien py & Service 
repaired AEROTREDS 
KNAPP SHOES Pred Herman OR_3-1592 
BEST CARPET CLEANERS. trated by — Brad-   
ience. FE 2244 - it Joursell. call 
Jim, 
BOOMING _ AREA Attractive ran bldg jl 
100x500 lot. 94 
—_ Rd. ce any busi 
ess, Owner. OL 1 ~6623, 
| coup wave Si 
urs., Dorothy's, PE 2-1244   
CHARLES CHESTERT AIR SHOES 
ELH. OR _3-4942 DAINTY —e e-em Mrs. allace. FE 
Invitations—Personalized Weddin 
19 E, LAWRENCE   
In Debt? © If you are ogy trouble ing 
Leelee ogi Bldg. PE 8-0456. 
    WHITE notches f 
  1 RM, KITCHENETTE. ENT.  Gulides. FE 40122. a Vpine ‘id 
1 ROOM MODERN, sHO |A- Tage. 154 Judson. ‘shes LE 
1 4+RM. are. aan P.O. 1 
we! bedr. pvt. Pe   
  
  
1 OR 2 MEN. EVERYTHING FUR- nished. Modern. FE 5-0303. 
3 $12 wk. 355 E. Bivd. 8. 
2 ROOM FURNISHED ahOR GEN. N- —— owe oe Nr. General Hos- 
2 PURR RMS Wit WITH Pleasant surroundings. . BATH. 
Neat & 
clean. No rake i 2-7384.   
2 ROOMS, SUIT. _— FOR RE- 
peed = Toren man. Private en- 
2 canoe ROOMS. CLOSE IN’ nicely furnished. Private bath and 
entrance. Ground floor. Welfare 
acepted. No dringing. FE 2-2181 
2 RM. EVERYTHING FURN. ~BA- 
Sie: 65 E. Howerd. FE 
ROO! ALL UTILITIES 
fie o- ag Private entrance. 
Oakland Ave.   
  
  
FUR- 
141% 
  
2 AND 3 ROOM APARTMENTS, | | private bath 179 Sark: 
3 aad NEWL ECORATED. 
odern, privaté. z . 70a34 até. 9 8S. Edith. 
—_ RMS. WITH BATH & 
"89 Btate St. FE! 2-0566. ; 
3 CLEAN ROOMS, ce TE EN- 
trance for couple lady. FE 
§-2585. 
2 RMS., MAIN FLOOR ENT. @ bath, Close in. re ei 4-1483.. 16 Florence 
2 ROOMS & BATH. $12 PER 
week. Child welcome. FE 5-1051. 
__Inquire at 273 Baldwin Ave. 
2 & 4 ROOM. CLOSE TO DOWN 
town. FE 4-5268. 
3 ROMS AND BATH. PVT. 
near bus line. FE 2-0661. 
6 p.m 22. 2 
3+RM. APT., FURN, OR UNFURN. 
oo ae Newly maleaasag FE 
| PRIVATE BATH. 31 
at i3 sae.   
  
  
ie? 
  
  
  
7 py PE 
* ste week. ve Le el came 3 cre 
and ent. $16. 264 
Pa 9728.   
3 RMS. AND BATH, SMALL BABY | weloome. 106 Dresden. ___. 
3 ne APT., ALL. Usa | oa = wet 5 i 
F< us & B A | PRIVATE EN. mens St. FE 
hats satecrear pen, | 
Seon include netics, "ce Couple month   
  
r Reon APT. Satter | 
Pesos a drive, Ut - fur a ear round lake home. FE 2-3238, 
et tue Ate On Se 
TR eee & entrance, 13 Pine ale 
N. 
RENT 1T FAST | through Rent Ads! Room, 
house, tment, any- 
  J ROOMS, FULL BATH. NEWLY 
decorated, heat, “hot water, 220 
8. Marshall. FE 2-1264.   3 — LARGE LIVING 
, kitchen, dinette, 
bath, Moder rn apt. building, 
Adults. Best addresses in Pontiac, 
off street parking, stove, refrig., 
heat, hot a furnished. ‘New 
rents. See Managers. 
SHIRLEY APTS. 
oF GLORIA APTS. 57 Mechanic St. PE 4-4226 
4 ROOMS, GROUND FLOOR, PRI- 
vate entrance, close in. FE 8-2204. 
@« RMS., & BATH, INDIAN VIL- 
__lage, dec., adults. FE 2-1523. 
4 ROOMS AND BATH. UPPER. 162 
Baldwin. PE 5-. 
5 RM. APT. aE WEY F TECORATED. Will take 2 small children. 87 
_Judson St. 4-8965. 
5 RMS, & BATH. $50. ON MARSH- 
all. FE 5-9564. 
§ LARGE ROOMS AND BATH, low 
  
  
  
  
  redecorated gas heat and hot water furnished, State St. $70. 
FE 4-5368. 
5 ROOMS & BATH. ON PAVED 
street. FE 2-6332 or FE 2-5788 
§ CLEAN RMS PVT. ENT. WEST. 
side. Main floor. 67 Henry Clay. 
§ RMS. & BATH . LOWER IN CITY. 
© RMS. CLOSE DOWNTOWN. 267 chenee Sit. FE 45067. 
ADIA APT. NO. 2   
  
P OR 3-6051. 
    
Newiy ceoete et rtment with 
3 rooms & bath per month. 
Children rhea Close to 
Somosie. churches, and downtown. 
Well-heated and ‘maintained. Am- 
le laundry facilities. See care- 
ker al A-2 —— eae cor- 
ner E. Huron 8t. or K. Hemp- 
__stead, 102 E. Huron. rE 4-8284. 
LOWER 4 RMS., BATH & SUN- 
(ad gag Heated. Stove furn. $70. 
ite only. No drinking. 473 8. 
Paddock St FE 2-0867. 
LOW RENT OPPORTUNITY — 
Good Pontiac location near East- 
ern Jr Hign & Longfellow. For 
Tesponsibl: party. Cali MY 3-1504 
for interview app't. 
Pauf A. Kern, Realtor Rentals FE 2-9209 
PALM VILLA APTS, 
3 rms Bath refrig. Stove mo. Aliso 1 1m. — sine mo. 
Adults only, FE 2-68 < 
hore ea BEDRM,. B Be cK 
ve & refrig. furn. o> ing. 96 Ez’ BI Bivd. 8. wed 
N GECORATED UPPER 
fiat. 4 rooms & bath. one Fe =   
  
    
  
NEAR ‘TEL-HURON ~ rooms & bath upper Stove, 
aelrig erator & apt. size washer 
furnished. Adults or 1 child piled 
welcome. All util. furn. $75 mo 
OR 3-T1p3.   
UNFURNISHED | APT. 3 ROOMS. 
__90 Union St, FE 4 -5452. 
UPPER 5 ROOMS AND BATH, GAS 
heat, $50 month Available Aug. 
. UL 32-2342. 
WEST SIDE. 4 RMS. & BA PVT. 
ent. Stove eins $80 includ- 
& BATH. 
3 children 
FE -4-7287.   
  SIDE DUPLEX 
and bath up — 
rm.,. kitchen 
basement auton 
rm., pear Pontiac 
Motor. month. FE 4-2521, be- 
_fore 5. FE 5-1172 after 5. 
Rent Houses Furnished 56 
+BLDRM. HOUSE. UTIL. FURN. 
Adults Drayton, OR 3-6302, 
RMB. & | BATE. oi0 WK. 
ee 9689. e 
NEWLY FUR * tront Ay available Sept. 
eee es atic 
  
  
3 ROOMS, PRIVATE. BATH, EN- 
satage. for couple, 
  ti ee Ee Go ai rn.) Sept.-June. 
RONT HOME - 
ple of sniall fam- 
to J Near 
     “ 
Suitable toto 
  ! { eas" | .- a oe va bs : ’ «4 : oe 
é 2 f« ee ; Na | : : | : = a 
THE PONTIAC PRES S. MONDAY, 1 AUGUST 3, 1959 ee ss Se ee 
Sale Susiness Property 16 _Help Wanted Female .20 Female 20, CARNIVAL By Dick Tome aa Business Services 2 28| Wtd. Children to Board 44 Rent Apts. Furnished 54) Rent | Houses Unfurn. 57 
ATRACTIVE gurr-| fest . Lov 3 ROOMS. AND BATH. PRIVATE 
tee ee pel, AT ONCE rome" CORAT GR tN | MRPEPURE: WROVRS COME)? Roows kD BATRA near and shopping cen LES LADY — Must ows Set NEW" \ Fes gS Wtd. Household Go Goods - 45|5“RooM FURN ‘APART- 3 penee it terms. a fad | be to «devote : full ment, 3348 Primary 8t., Auburn 
SO oe ong ea | work.” Real comme eS a8 bauer es evectimeten. ‘vt CASH POR USED TV'S, PURNI- nWEFE| comer oe S3isn 
Misme LE Rd. 60 eo teak of floor. time and excellent earn- = ture and mise. PE 2-0367.__- ar sign AT | ea per rt. FE SIMS *| tmgs assured. Prefer woman with CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP-| bath and ~ntrance. very, clea. mney Pa ambie tot LOCATED few ght but will Hols we i| Feet oes meen service, ¥E eer, ingulce af 210 Bald wn ave | Gone ge PE toot, . 
    ST BOU WaRD EIGHTS = t actA ad . 
OFFICE: 544 N. E. Boulevard at vorenee 
BEDRM 2-CAR ‘ FE 24 Lake ace. $100. Rg 
3 acon nn INQUIRE 12 
_Myra Ave. _ 3 BEDROOM HOUSE. SE. OAS HE HEAT, $65 ~| onth. 
Pontia ‘Oe sunday” 12-2. Line 
coin 5-2200 8 r 6p 
ROOM STONE HOUSE NEAR 
Rochester. Ideal for couple or 
single person. Reasonabie rent. 
Warren Stout, Realtor Tl N. Saginaw St FE 5-8165 
Open ‘til 6 p.m. 
4 RM. FPURN. OR UNFURN.,   
  
  
  
  on aly fenced in, children e ence . 
are 2566 Mab Union 
Lake. 
4 BEDROOM BRI agehe < 
Troy area, Large full base- 
ment, earner Bs 28: oC 1-9761 afte 
_er_ 6 p.m. ( -1038. 
¢ ROOMS a ny FURNISHED, 
near Oxbow Lake, off Union Lk, 
Rd. Year around, EM _ 3-2043. 
4 RMS. & BATH. NEWLY nee 
_ed. Auto. gas heat. FE 2-2051. 
5 LARGE Sous WITH PULL   
  basement, gas heat. gd is a 
pues terrace 208 E, , South, 
nth. 
DORRIS & ooint REALTORS 
152 W. Huron St. FE 4-1557 
5 BOOMS_BATEL 7301 FORDHAM, 
Harbor, ceuple—1 or 
per “PE 4-4423 between 12- 6. 
§ ROOM BUNGALOW, BASEM _ gas heat. 404 Elm. FE 2-05 2-0582 . 
6 RMS. & BATH, GAS AS HEAT. 
$75 mo. FE 2-0569 after 4-p.m, 
6 RMS. NEWLY DEC., ig “NORTH 
_end, Inquire 484 Fourt 
6 ROOM WITH qanaoke oll 
heat, month. Adults only. 
Near Ae eae School lol W. 
_Tence, FE 
6 ROOM Saat ee >G 
close to downtown and schools. 
$65 onth. 31 Douglas St. Inquire 
East Side Aito Parts. 
2276 GARLAND, SYLVAN LAKE 
front. 2 bedrooms, gas heat. 
stove and refrig. Basement, ga- 
rage. Rent or sell. WAlnut 2-1300. 
_ Detroit. 
DUPLEX. 6 ROOMS. 3 “BEDROOM MS, 
Clean, close to Daniel Whittfieid 
School. FE 3-9876. 
DUPLEX 2 BEDROOM, VERY 
nice, 1} floor, gas heat. 98 E. 
_ Rutgers. Lincoin 5-1652. 
FOR SALE OR RENT, HALF | DY- 
plex opposite Hol Name cnerch. 
ae Lake district, Birming- 
ham. 3 bedrooms, large livii-g 
room fuli dining room, spacious 
kitchen, breakfast room, jalousied 
den. New oil furnace, combina 
tion aluminum storms & screens, 
etc. By owner. MI 6-8206, Im- 
mediate occupancy. 
HOME ON N PONTIAC CLK. LK., YEAR 
sround. TUxedo 
NEAR ST. ee ate: 6 ROOM | 
and bath. Gas heat. $65 mo. 
_FE_4-6634,   
  
  
  
  
NEW 3 BDRM. HOUSE. Gas, PUR- 
nace. Pull bsmt. MU 4-0563. 
MODERN 2 BEDROOM oe ON 
Lake Louise. FE 4-1193 _ 
ROCHESTER—54180 DEQUINDRE. 
Studio ving rm. 2 large bedrms. 
Beautiful rounds easonable 
_tent. FE 
a Bo) POR FOR RENT, CALL   
  
  
SMALL, , HOUSE. $60 PER MO. FE 
  
WEST SIDE BRICK DUPLEX, close to Webster 
School, screens, storms, gas heat, 
nice yard, $90 & month. 
VASBINDER INC. 
FE 5-8875 | 
Rent Lake Costages £5 2 BEAUTIFUL COTTAGES FOR 
rent on Houghton tes Sleeps 6 
$70 $55 per 
cmi6. or write 
. Thick, Houghton 
Lake Heights, Mich. 
LAKEFRONT COTTAG GOoD beach. Lewiston, Miche FE §-1325 
KITCHENETTE MOTELS, BEACH 
& bosts. On Pontiac Lake. OR 
3-9389 
MISSAUKEE LAKE 
Aple 5-7086   
  
  
  SQUARE = BY MIRACLE MILE, 
modern. FE 8-1370. FE 4-3369. 
WATERFRONT, LIKE NEW, MOD- 
ern, on Sand Point, near Case- 
og Sleeps 8 available August to 8th UL 2 S42, 23rd to 7. $50   
; “Weekly. UL 
59 
erasers ROOM Pied GIRLS. 
Privileges. 547 W 
AT BUS STOP LGE. Sy RM. 
Everything for your convenience. 
FE 5-7332. ; 
BUSINESS PEOPLE. SHOWER, garage, cooking priv. FE 2-3517. 
CLEAN ROOM FOR MAN. PVT. 
ent. & shower, $7 wk. FE 2-2416. 
CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM, PRI- 
vate entrance. FE 40123. 
FOR PROFESSIONAL MEN EX- 
cellent accommodations. 563 W. Huron FE 3-7111. 
GENTLEMAN. CLEAN, COMFORT- 
. coe room, Reasonable. Call after 
p.m, FE | 
PRIVATE, DC DOUBLE “AND SINGLE 
— Near Genera] Hospital. FE _For Rent Rooms § Oe 
    
  
  
    
  
  ROOM AVAILABLE FOR RE- fined gentieman. References ex- 
changed. 584 Oakland. e 
SLEEPING ROOM FOR MEN 
_hear Fisher Body, FE 4-1039. _ 
SLEEPING ROOMS. PVT. EN- 
trance Bus stop. 174 State.   
  
Convalescent Homes 61 
WE OFFER THE FINEST IN 
equipment and service, at rea- 
| Bediae ambulatory” aChout care FE 42235, ry r care, 
  
Hotel Rooms 
HOTEL AUBURIN 
one Pts pe or bbe 
Also 1 2 — 
cr “and retrig ee ion 
2-9239 62 
ents. 
  shy burn — 
For Rent Stores | 63 
SMALL STORE a. ak 
Lake Roads. PE 4 
ULTRA- 2d g 
side. GOOD FOR 
ber shop. 3508 Elisabeth brea and 
Cass 4-443.   gtORES WEST 
  
Rent Office Space PPL POPP LPP LPP PLLA 
ue et Oe. rE OFFICE FOR RENT. 269 BALD- win Aw. Fm p10), 1 BALD- OFFICE FOR RENT. FE 21-9826 aes 
  
  
WEST HURON 
ton Wil give 9 peur ignse: Tow 
cee ag ‘Oppertaulasd 66 
10 STOOL CONEY ISLAND, MAIN highway, resort area OR tie 
      
DR: N RESTAURANT — Com 
plete = Seats approxi- 
wars "pad an one sei. Hide e. 
Prépe fixtures and everything . Owner Will take Sa’ contracts and 
Hagstrom    
       s & E g 
  ___THE PONTIAC. PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1959 re oe é. 
  
  
    Money is Loan 68 State Licensed Lenders)   
    
  QUICK $25 TO $500 LOANS 
$ Seaboard Finance Co. 185 N. PERRY STREET ; East Par “= Phone FE "E 8-066] 
SEER PRACT us tenses “WHER YOU NEED" gh- = picblege MU eso we ad TO $500 1 you. Mae Depron aang eoM coug| STATE FINANCE CO. | steady business. Owner ol accept} 102 Pontiac State Bank ome. 
nent Gall for pe ‘ile _ FE 41574 
LOANS §25 TO $500 ‘A & 6 ROOM HOME 
Good condition, nicely decorated. | , PAXTER & ivitofeen This | g Make an 
excellent incom will 
property or land contract fa pugs Mortgage Loans — 69 
STATEWIDE | ,2N.MORTGAGES -$2,000 NS BY 
Real Estate Service of Pontiac | Repaying Ee TOR, 3.5, YEARS 1117.8. Tel ff 14-0521 PAYMENTS. PHONE DETROIT ONLY $7000 DOWN WILL BUY “CONSOLIDATE ae as station and fue! oi] business CON OLIDATE | os equipped, including tank! your debts Get cash to ck, wrecker. and 15, al.| off your land contract or more See eee ee eal gree & to modernize your home. f u e do @ work. Anywhere in vi vary hignway Realtor pnd Oakiand County Free Apraisals. 
MIS, Ortonville, Na 17-2815. 
“LET’S TALK 
BUSINESS” 
Drug Store & Liquor Here is an ideal combina-   
cludes living quarters. Good. 
volume in bot Ueagt gabe 
and packaged liquor. Thumb 
area location. ; 
Boat Wells Grocery, SDM, and iiving 
uarters on Clinton River. 
xcellent living and fun 
tao, Never offered before. 
MICHIGAN BUSINESS 
SALES CORPORATION | JOHN A. LANDMESS! 1537 Telegra 
PARK AT OUR 
Partridge 18 THE “BIRD” TO SEE ER, BROKER 
ih Rd. 
ONT DOOR 
  
Boat Liveries 
Picnic Parks 
a PONTIAC LAKE — 6 acres, 310’ 
sandy beach. Cool, comfortable 
shade for picnickers. 28 boats, 
r-B-Q's.. Teezer, é@tc. $7,000 
down. 
ONE OF OAKLAND'S' BEST 
LAKES ~— 575’ lake frontage, 30 
new boats -ottages, living ae 
ters, $51,000 
GENESEE LAKE :NVESTMENT 
— Revenue from beautiful bathing 
beach, picnic park, and roller 
rink while this investment grows 
in value. 2000’ of lake frontage 
1 trade. Wonderful 
against inflation! 
OTHER SIMILAR 
TUNITIES! 
Partridge and Associates 
3581 1 W. HURON | 
BUSINESSES 7 ket heads MICH. 
SUNOCO 
SERVICE STATIONS 
FOR RENT 
BLISHED LOCATIONS OPPOR- 
  
INVENTORY ONLY 
M 59 AT Tull Ct. 
Waterford Twp. 
Pontiae 
eo 6 weeks paid training 
progra 
Puancial assistance to those who 
qualify. 
For complete information—Fhone| 
Mr. Griffith. 
SUN OIL CO. VInewood 3-4200 
OR 3-9383 Eves. after 7 p.m. & Sat. 
Mon. through Fri. 
; GArtield 2-6493 
FOR SALE OR LEASE: DRY, 
cleaning plant, ay equipped and 
opereting, For inf “ieee write! 
Pontiac Press, Box 15. 
RESTAURANT FOR SALE. DOING 
__good business. FE 2-2605. 
STANDARD OIL Modern 2-stall stations for lease, 
good potential, financial © assist- 
ance ramped training available. 
    
  
VILLE 
_fve —-. days or VE 17-3426 
~ SINCLAIR OIL CO. Has 2 modern service stations 
for lease on Dixie Hwy. 1 has 
large 40 ft. sales room. Can be 
used for associated business, Fi- 
aencal help need. Call FE _ 
SHELL OIL: Co. Has for lease a modern 2 bay 
at 10501 
near Teggerdine 
. Wonderful business oppor- 
tunity with minimum financiat 
requirements. For information 
call Mr. Stepanian from 9 
_ to 430 P 
8 PM., EM 3-0453. __   
  
__Sale Land Contracts ¢ 67) 
LAND CONTRACTS TO BUY oO 
to sell, Earl Garrels. EM 3-2511 
or EM 3-4086. 
Money to Loan 68 __ (State License: ricsnsed lee Lenders) 
BUCKNER FINANCE Oe as 
RE YOU 
BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES 
Pontiac - Drayton Spicins ~- Utica Walled Lk., Birmingham, Plymouth 
“Borrow with Confidence 
$25 to $500 
Household Finance 
ration of Pontiac 
3% 8. Saranwrak t. FE 4-0535| - 
GET $25 ZO $500 ON YOUR 
Signature Up to 24 tr to Repay 
PH. 
OAKLAND Loan Company * __202 Pontiac § State Bank Bldg. 
~ LOANS $25 TO $500 On dogo ov or other Pr 
service is is fast. A tthenaty vere hel 
aie a our: office or phone Bry 
HOME & AUTO | 
LOAN CO. 1 N. Perry St Corner EB. Pike 
$50 TO ee - TO $500 
30 . VAWRENCE OAR CO aan ___FRIENDL SERVICE 
TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 
202 S. MAIN 
14 E. ST. CLATR!   
  
  
  
ROCHE ae ROMEO). he ge. 
| 
Telegraph Rd. at Myrtle) 
A.M.| 
-0277. hater Free Consulta’ 
BIG BEAR COkMTRUGTION co. 
FE 3-7833 92 W. Huron   
Swaps 70 
"51 a eee FOR MOTOR- 
cycle. EM 2795. 
a ror SED Vib TAPE 
corders and radi = raphs 
Working or not. FE 2-0: POS . . 
    2 BEDROOM HOME A on ESCENT 
Lake. $8,000. wut accept late 
model car or truck as down pay- 
ment. 4-7858. 
cozy 2 BEDROOM BUNGALOW, 
on canal, Large lot, vacant. Trade 
for g au Se or house- 
trailer. 950. Clark Real Estate, 
FE 4-4813 
CHEST ¢ OF DRAWERS 
for pple size   BED 
olly wood ea. FE 
  
EquiTY IN HOUSE FOR HOUSE 
trailer. 35 to 40 ft. Taylor Twp., 
vicinity o ateleeraoh & Eureka. 
WHitney 1 -262 
FREE AND CLEAR HOME. VAL- 
ue $9,000 for ay in house out 
of city. Call after 2-6007. 
SELL OR TRADE FOR CAR, CABIN 
near Glennie. FE 8-64! 
SWAP MY EQUITY IN ope SKY- 
liner 34° ft. ere for car, 
clear. Call OR 3-9360 after 1 p.m. 
TRADE ‘36 RAMBLER STATION eile mea or pois acreage or 
se   
  
      
  
UP- 
  
for 9 months. 
Call “een mer. PE sara ARE _Home Produc a 
FREEZERS - NORGE FREEZERS   
Chest and Uprights 
New models, slight! Z= scratched or 
crate-marred models at big dis- 
c prices. 
2 years to pay & 
9 2 we as cash * 
GABERT 
121_N. Saginay FE 56-6189   
FREEZERS AT BARGAIN PRICES 
all sizes available. Samuel's “Ap- 
_pliances, Davisburg. _MA_5-6011. 
PULL SIZE BED, BOX SPRING 
. & mattress   
oh 
complete 35. Call aner 
moeurere, Royal Oak. 
GReEN DAVENPORT, EXC. CON-   
_after 5. OL 1 SOD RE f 
ESE Resioct cond, on right. 
dition. 2 small | leather chairs. Call oF By Kate Osann 
  
  
  
      
  
  
  
  
  
GIBSON ‘6 FT. UPRIGHT FREEZ- 
Admiras 11 ft. upright freezer $190 80 ga) electric water seed $129 
Cash & Carry 
ROY's REPLACEMENT. “PARTS 
06 Oakiand Ave FE 2-402) 
GIBSON 10 CU. FT. reEPniG. EXc. 
_ cond, $15. FE 8-8519. 
GE REFRIGERATOR, CROSLEY 
FE i-0034, At other household items. 
GE 10 CU or DEEP ar. 
and GE auto. washer. Both rea- 
_sonable. 2578 Sy! Dr. 
BLE JAMESTOWN MAPLE dresser & 50. 
Phil g. $50. Hetpemnt 
daire automatic 
in. mahogany 
cabinet with doors, RCA TV $50. 
Rotary power mower $30. Mahog- 
any secretary $40. Boy's En ne 
ihe $20. Dog house $5. O. 
JENNY LIND BED, BEAUTIFUL 
formal. size 14, worn once. Both 
_cheap. FE 4-8426. 
KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR. 
Sib. working cond. Cheap. UL 
LINOLEUM & PAINT SALE. HALF price. At Jack's. 281 Baldwin. _   
  
  
  
  
  
TRADE ea Egor IN WA- 
terfront lot at Commerce Lake 
yer Aa a of equa) value. MAr- 
eT SOFTENERS TO RENT 
_or sell. $3.50 month. OR 3-2360. 
WANTED: PLATFORM SCALES. 
1 to 5 lbs. oF larger. Alse 
chicken picker. Will trade broil- 
ers, black dirt tractor work or 
_What do you need? 4-4228. 
WILL TAKE CAR IN TRADE 
part or full iets on 8 acres 
10 miles sou West Branch.   
  
      
    80 rod, a Aver irohage MAy- 
_fair 65256. 
_, For Sale ‘Clothing 71 
5 T eomuats ane 1 rene 
con all size and 10. 3-   
LOVELY SINGER ZIG ZAG SEW- 
ing machine idoes not need 
tachments) Button holes 
casts, Mofograms, embroidery de- 
signs. Take on Payments of $7.20 
per mo. or pay $77.50 full bal- 
Capito] Appl. FE" 5-9407. 
LARGE CRIB AND MATTRESS 
brand new $15.95. Pearson’s Fur- 
niture 42 Orchard Lake Ave. 
NEW 7 QT. re COOKER 
canner. r. FE 5-24 
NORGE * AUTOMATION —WAS WASHER, 
pertect condition. 1 highchair. "| 
table at 3 chairs. all low bee 
Call FE 8-8966. 
NEW Sooree CLEANER. $62.50 
with trade. R. B. Munro Elec. 
_Co., 1060 W. Huron. 
NORGE AUTOMATIC ear ia 
Good condition. $89.95. R. B 
ro Elec. Co., 1060 W. Hanson   
  
  
  
  
  
ALL SIZES CLEAN USED WORK 
pants from 35c; shirts from 15c; 
also fishing worms & tackle Open 
7 days, 388 Orchard Lk. Ave 
‘BOYS 3 TO 5, LADIES, 12 TO. 18, 
min's suit and wool jacket. Size 
42, Shirts. 15% gray, ladies rid- 
ing boots, size 6. FE  2-5300. 
LADIES COMPLETE LINE OF 
clothing. Size 16. &xc. condition. 
Reasonable. FE 5-9036, 
_Sale Household Goods 73 —_——— 
2 ELECTRIC STOVES. “ 
$125. 384 N. Perry. Apt. 4. 
2 PC. BLUE LIVING aon SUITE 
Call MI 17-0877 after 4 p.m. 
2 LARGE CORNER CUPBOARDS. 
_ Call ¢ after 8 $ p.m. FE 2-242}. 
3-PIECE BEDROOM SET, PLUS 
mattress and springs. OR 3-0124. 
3 LIVING ROOM CHAIRS, 4 
kitchen chairs. FE 43133.   
  
  
re ree 
  AND 
  
  
  
  /6 PIECE SILVER GRAY BEDRM. 
outfit. Double dresser bookcase 
bed. Large chest 9 vanity lamps, 
all for $89.50. Pay only $2 weekly. 
Pearson's Furniture 42. Orchard 
Lake Ave. 
\] PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITE. | Brand new davenport and chair, 
2 modern step tables, matching 
coffee table, 2 decorator lamps. 
All for $99. Pay only $2 weekly. 
Pearson's Furniture 42 Orchard 
_Lake Av: 
9 FT. Fey inatOR WITH LARGE 
freezer across top, $75; Heywood 
Wakefield china cupboard, buffet 
bottom, and hutch top with glass 
doors champagne color. One 
Here folding poker tahe $10. FE 
5-247 
‘9x12 “Felt. Base Rugs $3.95 RUBBER BASE PAINT. GAL. §3.75 
| Ic PAINT SALE 
4Y4-Ft. Wall Tile... .25c 
|Syer’s, 141 W. Huron FE 4-3064 
‘oxi2 RUGS, WOOLFACE $15.95. 
Reversible. $16.50, imported 
$34.85. xminster, Rug 
sone’ $5.95. Pearson Furniture. 42 
Orchard Lake Ave. 
CU. FT. CR ceUre. REFRIG. 
Excellent cond FE 4-7251     
    
  11 
  17™ ADMIRAL $24.95 
21° Admiral 39.95 
other sets to choose from, 
3 ape & guaranteed 30 days. 
& labor. Obel TV, 3930 
Elizabeth Lk. Rd FE .4-4045. We 
‘ake ee 
0 FRIGIDAIRE _ ELEC. stave $100. 2_yrs. old. OR 3-3239. 
30 INCH. ELEC. RANGE LIKE 
Ae meat and oven timer. FE 
8-3366.   
  
  AIR - CONDITIONERS. NEW & 
used. 5-001. low prices. Samuel's. 
MA   
        AUGUST FE ATURES G_E. EL@CTRIC DRYERS, N 
Heat control. Delivered . "814s 
cinecn REFRIGERATOR, Nex 
4 Cu. Ft. Dial defrost .. $159 95 
OR newed, Gas or Electric. 
Guaranteed. Deuwered: Selection, 
GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 
\ ac 
51 W. HURON FE Abst 
ADMIRAL DEEP FREEZE ae 
ft Good cond $100 FE_ 5-1497 
ABOUT ANYTHING oO WANT FOR HO. BE 
FOUND wy L&s MBALES. 
A litule out of the way but a lot 
less to pay. Furniture and caw <i 
ances of al] kinds. NEW & U. 
Visit our trade dept. for Fel 
bargains 
% MONTHS TO PAY 
We wey, sell or trade. Come out 
and look around. 2 acres of free 
Phone FE 45-9241 
N MON SAT. 9 TO 
FRI. 0 
4 miles BE. of Pontiac or 1 mile | 
E. of Auburn Heights on Auburn _Rd. M59.   
BUY TRANSISTOR RADIOS 
Real bargain! FE 5-8755. 
BOLND DINING ROOM SUITE. 6 chairs, table, buffet. Excellent 
condition. UL _2-2349. 
BENDIX XuroMaTic Ww WASHER. 
$35. Power mowers. FE i: 
BRAND NEW WROUGHT ae 
bunk beds. Complete with springs 
and mattress. $39.95. Pearson's 
Furniture, 42 Orchard Lake Ave. 
BRAND NEW SOFA BEDS $44.95. 
Rollaway be compete. $19.95. 
Hollywood bed fram $6.95. In- 
nersp attresses, “eit os. Cot- ton mattresses, $12.95. Pearson's 
__Furniture 42 } Orchard Lake Ave. 
BEAUTIFUL SINGER SEWING 
machine cabinet model, Zig Zag 
equipped. hee aga ¢enar 
67. = cash month 
woe 1 & credit Mgr. or months, 
FE 347s, . Home Prod- 
_ucts. 
BANKRUPT STOCK 
tle ast ons "Caste ‘con Rcd 
and bag a Box   
  
  
  
Open 
"til @, 1,000 ft. o on 0 & P Market, 
ELEC. STOVE. REFRIGERAT otner misc. Ba, OR Seas 
UPRIGHT FAMOUS wane brands. Scratehed. Terrific 
ues $149.95 while they last. No 
one orders, please. Michigan 
Ar at 393 «Orchard Lak   
  
  
SAVE ENERGY, USE 
WANT ADS! To. find a 
job, place to live or a 
used car, see Classi- 
ow. |         
OVER 50 USED TV sETS. FROM 
$14.95 up. TV 
WALTON TV 515 E. Walton 
FE 2-2257   
ZAIN: -TILE-LINOLEUM 
9 x 12 Rugs, $3.95 
SHOVER'S 140 S° Saginaw 
REFRIGERATOR, $45. 91 IN. TV — 
good condition, $50. Wringer wash- 
20. Gas stove, $30. Electric 
stove, $35 GE dishewasher, $40. Trailer hot saree heater, $20. Gar- 
den tractor with attachments — 
Like new, $125. Record player, 
$25. Swing set — Like new, $20. 
FE 5-2766 
RESPONSIBLE PARTY TO TAKE 
over 6 payments of $665 after 
deposit on new portable sewing 
machine. All essential features of 
machines selling for $119.50. Sin- 
ger Sewing Center. FE 2-0811 or 
_FE_ 8-9352. 
REFRIGERATORS. LasT YEAR'S 
1958 models. One ef americe = 
best makes.   
  
  
reecent, 383 Orchard Lake Ave. 
ROLL AWAY BED, LIKE NEW. Full size. $15. 390 Whittemore. 
REYNOLDs _ FACTORY REBUILT 
softener. 64,000 grain unit. 
Reconditioned Frigidaire washer. 
CRUMP ELEC’ Ic 
3465 Auburn FE 4-3573 UL 2-3000 
SINGER PORT. ZIG-ZAG ATTACH. 
$19.50 Electrolux vacuum. $14.95. 
_Terms. Curt's Appl., OR 3-8702. 
STOVES BOUGHT, SOLD, EX.     
  
  changed. Turner's. 602 Mt. Clem- 
ens. FE 2-0801. 
SAVE 
AIR CONDITIONERS 
Were Now 
Deluxe G.E. 220V, : 
17 BIU_........ 249.95 184.00 
Custom G.E. 110V. 
7100 BTU 259.95 184.00 
SUPPLY LIMITED 
$5 DOWN DELIVERS 
GOODYEAR 
SERVICE STORE 30. =«S. Cass FE 5-6123 
TRADE GAS RANGE FOR ELEC- 
tric range. R. B. Munro Electric 
Co. 1060 W. Huron. _ 
SINGER SEWING MA CHINE. 
Full price $38.60 or pay $6. 
2 oe Sagas cond ion 
v ao e@ use. Capito _FE_ 5-94 D Appl. 
eS 2 SUITER, FOR 
sale, cheap. A-1 cond. or would 
trade for leather suit case. FE 
_5-3624 after 74 | P- m. 
SAVE $100 | New Fedders air-conditioners. 9,000 
BTU. Cools 485 Sq. Ft. Reg. pret 
$249. Our price $149 Fr 
_ guarantee. Schick’ s MY P3aiit. 
“TABLE TOP GAS RANGE $10 
Kitchen cabinet $10 
China Cabinet $10 
Crosley TV $25 
Singer Sewin chine $25 
Bendix combination washer 
and dryer $95   
  
  
Elec. 
& EXCHANGE Everything for the home 
104 §_ Saginaw FE 2-5523 
— TRADE-IN DEPT.     
Easy Copper tub washer ... $29.95 
Norge guar. washer ...... $39.95 
Barton Rebuilt washer $49.95 
Norge washer . ..... $59.95 
Maytag with MP oie. 0.9 
Woman's Friend Regent wash $79.95 
WYMAN'S ae be items available. 
E-Z terms. FE 4-1122 
TPEAN GAS RANGE. CALI OA 
8-2473 or MI 17-0877 after 5 a 
—_— rors RANGE FOR G 
po . B. Munro Electric os 
“w. B itarose 
dap. om. ELECTRIC DRYER, 
ter aa ee unro Elec. Co., 
USED ELECTROLUX  RECONDI- 
tioned cleaner, $24.95. R. B. 
_Munro Elec. Co., ‘1060 W. Huron. 
~ Used Trade-In Dept. Occasional cuaie 
Drum table 
Swive] rocker ... 
9x12 rug and pad : 
Davenport and chair . 
Gas range   
  
  
  
    
   
    to 
THOMAS ECONOMY" 318. Regina FE 2-018) ANTIQUE DISHES, OIL “amps Marble-top tables MY 
WASHING MACHINE, CONVEN- 
ovat $129.95 v alu e, $79.05, 
hipped. Michigan Fluorescent, 
_303 93 Orchard Lake Ave. 5. 
WILL SELL MO DER N FURNI- 
ture or exchange for Maple. Dex- 
ter ae machine. $20. Clothes 
Bite, Swing set $10. FE   
  
  
  
e | WASHER, APT. SIZE FLOOR MOD- el with —— wringer & 
hog hose. $25. 2 burner electric 
a Y Clarkston, MA_ 5-6781 
on, Wed. after 5: 30 pm. 
WAL. | meee MARBLE TOP, 
dress. nice rockers, mirrors, pic- 
tures, dishes, misc. FE 
Open afternoons. .78 Dwight. 
ZIG - ZAG SEWING ~ MACHINE. Makes buttonholes, sews feet 
tons — Sa nih ee   
    $1 
Michigan "& Sewing Center. west         
    
{-3 
“I don't think money brings 
what I get for an allowance!” Cid 
© 1969 by NEA Service, ina, 
TM. Reg. US. Pat. Off 
ae 
unhappiness — at least not 
  
eee SPINNING WHEEL, REFINISHED 
good condition, OL 1-1105. 
74A *| Hi-Fi, TY TV v& Radios 
CASH FOR USED TVs. PUR- chasec at your nome. FE 2-0367. 
NTED: ULTRA-SONIC SOUND 
pauineenk. 20,000 cycles per sec- 
FE 4-1897. or over. 
Water Softener 75 
AUTOMATIC SOPTENER. NEW OR 
used. Reas. Priced. FE 2-5827. 
For Sale Miscellaneous 76 rere oS 
“ae Be elrant PIPE, ‘be PER 
8   
  
  
  
  1. < at ante mIDING 
nstalied peed oe stock 
ALUM AWN 8, STORMS 
Wo ring down, $5 mo. & up 
J VALLELY CO. “The old reiiable pioneers” 
Auburn & Bockes er Rds. 
UL 2-4900 Eves. OL 1-6623 
2 WHEEL TRAILER. 4 x 7 STEEL 
por = frame. One new tire and 
iano barf tire & tube. 
$15. Cali -2303.   
  
2 WHEEL TRAILER, NEW. $65. UL 2-4128   
2 FUEL OIL TANKS. GOOD CON- _Gition, Will deliver. FE 5-9120. 
au 670X15 NEW WHITE TUBELESS 
tires. $23 each plus tax and ex- 
ap dd Herb’s, Auburn and Shir-   
& = - WINDOWS & 
FE 5-6307. 463 screens. PORCH 
36x66. 
3-SPEED WINDOW: FANS. $24.95. Ope every evening. Hampton 
_ Electric. 823. W. Huron. 1 FE 4-2525. 
3 PIECE BATH. LIKE NEW. 
_ Briggs plumbing. FE 4-159. 
4 IN. SOIL PIPE. PER LENGTH, 
2 z 3 in. soil pipe, per Brig ir 
39. G Thompson, 7 58 
West. Open Eves. 
#INCH SOIL PIPE § FT. $3.79. 
oe Pumps $ 
E PLUMBING SUPPLY 
va" Sagina FE_ 5-2100 
& FOLDING omer 4 DINING 
roow chairs a@-2 pants suit, 3 
wagons, and a scooter. other mise 
— FE 5-2674 
8X7 ALUMINUM DOOR WITH 
hardware. Cheap. FE 2-8469 after 
_5 p.m. 
6x10 WALL TENT FOR CAMP-   
  
    
hydro- 
plane with 16 H.P. Mercury en- 
_&ine. Good cond. OL 1-9053. 
10 YR. 52 GAL. ELEC. WATER 
heater. $67.50. Cash & carry. G. 
A. Thompson 7005 M59. west. 
Open ‘eves . _ 
14 — 32 ROMEX SPECIAL, COIL 
tots 2c per ft. boxes, fittings 
at special prices. G. A. Thomp- 
son. 7005 M59 West. Open Eves. 
21" SELF-PROPELLED _ ROTARY 
mower, $25; 7 qt. pressure cooker, 
$10; 51-3 h.p. outboard, $30; Gas 
welding outfit, $35. 1121 Voorheis. 
62 GAL ELEC HEATER. $69.95,   
          For Sale Miscellaneous 7 76 
FOR SALE 2 WHEEL TRAILER, 
rugged steel and wood construc- 
tion, 3 tires. % ton axle and 
eae good coudion @ $75. OL 
  
FREA aoe TOILETS $18.95 
Double bow sink .......... $ 5.05 
20-f Cl eennecaae 16c ft. 
%-in. hard copper 
20 ft. lengths .. ....... 4c ft. 
3-pe. bath sets with trim $80.95 
3- . colored bath -set wit 
172.8. Saginaw Factory 2nds. — Irregulars 
SAVE PLUMBING 8 PLY 
FOR SALE. MINK EQUIPMENT, 
FE 4-4143. 
GARAGE DOORS Factory seconds, all standard 
sizes in stock from $25 and up. 
Electric door operators, folding 
closet doors and disappearing 
stairways. 
W- give estimates on garage re- 
modelin 
Open trom 8 to 5 
Noon on Saturdays 
BERRY DOOR SALES 371 S. Paddocr FE 2-0203 
GM. DELCO OIL FURNACE, 225 
gal. oil tank. Also metal work- 
bench. FE _ 2-0088. 
HOT WATER HEATERS. 30 GAL. 
gas. New, Consumers Power ap- 
proved. $89.50 valdé, - $39.50 and 
$59.50. These are slightly marred. 
Also electric, oil and bottled gas 
heaters at terrific values. Michi- 
gan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard 
_ Lake Ave. —16. 
Haggerty CASH & CARRY SPECIALS   
  
  
    
  
2x4-—7 fir economy studs tg ea. 
1x12 WP shelving .. . 13¢ ft. 
1xl0 WP eens “y bee in. Ao 
1x12 WP sheathing .... lin. 
Prefinished Lauan .... $120 seek 
4X8x% sanded fir plywood 84 ea 
4x8x% safided fir plywood $7.52 ea. 
Ready Mixed Concrete and 
Motar .. $1.07 bag 
We Build Roof Trusses 
CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE 
MA 4-4591 For Sale Miscellaneous 76 
PATIO STONES 
- 30% OFF 
wma tac, le Bg SES Co., hosts u A Be, (M59) eee “of 
PICNIC TABLES, POLDING oR 
stationary legs. & top. “KD.” 
‘.     
70 8. Squirre! Rd. 
RANGE HOODS } With Pax ONLY eee a. pson, 7005 M   
  RAPIDAY% AYTON SHALLOW WELL 
eo ‘ype pump. UL 42-3509 after 
aeons BATTERIES $5.95, 
months guarantee. OPE 81816 192 
8. Saginaw. _ RCA GEIGER COUNTER. COM- _ plete with batteries) and 
$35. Phone UL ee ‘weekdays after 5:30. 
8c Sia Hrd 1% HP. nd s ¢ & saws. vr 
& boy nab bike. FE 8-6306. 
SPECIAL LUMINUM coMBIN ATION DOORS   
~ 
        
    
CHURCH'S, INC. _ CL 24000 
STALL SHOWERS. COMPL 
with faucets and curtain, re 50 
value, $34.45. Lavatories, complete 
$14.95: toilets, 
$24.50. Thes, 
Michigan luorescent, 393 Or- 
_chard Lake Ave 
= = SALVATION "ARMY 
ED SHIELD 8TORE 
Everything to meet your needs 
Clothing rniture os mee 
118 WEST LAWR value ——- 
_Sand, oe Pies -   
CR NE, SAND, GRAV- 
el, Eerl 1 Howard. EM 3-053i 
GOOD “ROAD GRAVEL. 5 YARDS for $7. Delivered. PE 4-6588, 
Fowitac LAKE BUILDERS SUP- Sand, pee * dirt. Cement, 
Deena tile, OR st 
YARD,: DRIVEWAY, GRADIN 
top soil, gravel, fill ‘ete. FE seed 
Plants, Trees, Shrubs 8 
IRIS, ORIENTAL Saeco year 
ee All colors. Ln . Lon 
ake Ra Between Rochester Rd. 
MU 
om   
  
  
& Livernois. o- le 
an TREE SERVIC! 
ming & removal. FE &- 
87 ___ For Sale Pets y 
bop int ur -   
  
REGISTERED 
er & Cee 
_ sired. ] 
AKc aE ERED  COLLTE PU PUPS. 
880 Farnsworth. Oxbow Lake. 
AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES. 7 1 
wks. old E 5-1364. 
AKC REG. GERMAN SHEPHERD 
pups. 1 white, $75. 36303 
Quindre, south of 16 Mile Ho. 
_Troy_ 
BOSTON TERRIER 8TUD CHAMP 
Stock. Curtiss. OR 3-0296. 
COCKER PUPS. AKC REAS. 8U- 
_gerland Cockers. EM 3-0242. 
CUTE COCKER PUPPIES, 7 WKS. 
old. PE 5-5718. "Spun 
  
    
  
FORJAN KENNELS 
tong paired dachshunds 
Champion sire & dam 
Pet & Show stock 
Puppies available 
rs al at. stud 
OR 3-0265 
  
TALBOTT LUMBER Glass eee tn sash. Therece! 
for water 
trical supplies & lumber. 1025 
_Oskiand Ave. FE ¢- 
UMBRELLA CLOTHESLINE. 
Hutch football] helmet. 22 rifle. 
Pony hide motor jacket. FE 
4-5867   “USED OIL FURNACE. CALL FE 2-7164   
bnioota! nt VALUES 
Vinyl Latex Paint ...... $2.75 gal. 
Eavestrough 64c Leds gt. 
Double sink & trim $25 
Romex 14-2 _. ae “full coils 
ener pips, 6" ...0.... _ r ft. 
$3.35 ad) igt. 
21 ORCHARD LAKE RD   
76A 
FORD DIESEL ENGINES 4 & 6 
cylinder for trucks, saw mills, etc. 
Ford | ageren engines for irriga- 
tions industrial applications. A 
few used engines available. Call 
_ distributor. MI 4-6053. 
Do |! It | Yourself 
po IT a EASY pend Machinery 
  
77 
  A 
BO 
489 8. SANFORD FE 
FOR RENT Wall paper steamer. floor sand- 
ers, polishers, hand 
nace vacuum cleaners. 
Fuel & Paint. 436 Orchard Lake 
. FE 5-6159 
LOWER PRICES ON COPPER 
Argent eavestsough and fenc- 
Open weekdays 8:30 to 6. 
Sundays 10 to 4. —- Build- 
a sain” - 156 W Montcalm, 
~ Sale. Musical Goods _ 79 
5 FOOT MAHOGANY GRAND PI- 
_Yeit Reduced for quick sale. FE 
GRAND PIANO. 
__Will finance, FE 5-4 
PIANO TUNING - cacin SCHMIDT 
FE 2-5217   
  
EXC. COND. 
  
  FREE TO GOOD HOME, 1% YEAR 
old thoroughbred es: 8i- 
_berian sled dog. FE 8-1593. 
FEMALE San ae AKC REG., $20. 
GERMAN SaErean TAN AND 
black, 2 years oe good pe 
watch dog. $25. FE 4-835 
GERMAN Sse PUPPIES. Mother & Father AKC Reg. but 
nO papers on pupples. 4 0 for 
_male or female. 1919 e Rd. 
~ PARAKEETS AND SUPPLIES 
183 Sanderson ° E_2-7727 
PARAKEETS, CAN ake & BUP- 
gues Crane’s Bird Hatchery, 3489 
UL_ 2-2200.   
  
  
PEKINGESE PUPPIES. old. AKC Reg. aii 
_disposition, O 
| POODLES SvLED oe BARBARA 
_No secetives |_used., E 4-2268. 0 WEEKS 
= guallty and 
  
      
Williams Lake For Sale Housetrailers 95   
  
‘HOUSE TRAILER interior, Make ge Pike, 
LATE ‘56 PONTIA rear. 
— Tratler’ Park 1 bedroom. Keego 
OXFORD 
TRAILER 
SALES TEWART GENERAL GARWOOD 
: EAT LAKES & PAMMER 
Pare t to 10 side. 40 to 
sx sea. we trade, seil or rent. 
ee oe some meaeerfar, buys 
See us today. One 
Lake Orion on M24.   
right now! 
= south of L 
[Y 2-0721. 
Cciene N TRAILERS FOR SALE. 
Rent a eater ie ho Ts er 
Pixi. er Sales, 
near ad. Oxford. OA &-3783 
NEW CUSTOM BUILT 17’ TRAV- 
el trailer. Sacrifice at $1100. 4719 
Ross Dr 
PARKHURST 
TRAILER SALES 1540 Lapeer Rd. Lake Orion 
MY 5] 
Featuring new 1950 w Moon 
Mobile soohnae Between Lake Or- | 
and Oxford. On M24.   
  
  
Ine of parts 
is installed 
a. 3172 W. Huron. 
VACATION nen FOR 8ALE 
or rent. Jacobson’ om Trager sales, 6685 Williams Lk. Rd R 3-5081 
OR 3-2838.   VACATION TRAILERS LARGEST 
selection in this area. Full lines 
of Tour-A-Home & Cree coaches. 
See these in completely self-con- 
tain: units. Apache camp trail- 
ers this week only, Large 
selection of used trailers. 
CY, 
Rent Trailer Space % 
N ate MOBILE S. 
AURGE. Th The finest. % mile SE 
Pon tiac. 
170 _(N. Ke a 
TY LIMITS. 
e | ee fod by Pontiac "frailer 
Coach Park 5-9002.   
      
- 5-361   
  
PARAKEETS,. CANARIES, CAGES 
Food. Since 1927. 584 Oakland Ave 
RABBITS WHITE MICE, ALL PET Shop 55 Williams. FE ¢ 
REG. TOY FOX TERRIER = POP: 
pies. Call FE 4-6904 or FE 2-4436 
after 5:30 
REGISTERED TOY FOX TER- 
phere, gtown females. Very cheap 
good home. Also Eo Spaaaeas Stud 
Sersice: MAple 5-12 
Dogs Trained, B'rded 87A   
  
  
  DOGS AND CATS BOARDED. 
_Burr-Shell, 375 8 Telegraph 
TAIL WAGGER KENNELS. 
Boarding, training & trimming. 
Brittany & Poodle Stud Co eee 
Pick Se, calvary: 125 W... Buell 
OL 1-7294. __ 
Hunting Dogs 87B a OO   
2 RMAN  S8HORT-HAIRED 
posters. AKC. OA 8-2128. 
| BRITTANY PUPPIES, AKC R REG., 
descendants of show stock. FE   
BEAGLES & POINTERS. GUARN. __Trial given. 3091 Rockhaven. 
REGISTERED Je eg PUPS, _Teasonable. FE 4-5891. 
_Hay, Grain rain & F Feed & 88 nee ener   
ALL TYPES OF 18T & 2ND CUT- OBILEHOME ESTATES. MOD- 
are lakefront and playground. 
_EM _ 3-2661   
ville road 
REKHURST ire TRAILER 
ota MY 2-4611. The best for 
less. Wonderful .ocation. 12 
acres Between Lake Orion and 
_ Oxford. 
YOU'VE SEEN THE REST; NOW   
  
  
  e the best. uare Lake ‘Trailer 
Park. ye aaah, 
wate Accessories 97 
For Sale © Tires 98 
4-1 USED — os UP. WE 
buy, sell. Also whitewalls. 
STATE TIRE SAL ALES 
$03 Saginaw St. _—sFE_¢-0687 
KUHN Re 
149 W. Huron ae nis 
STANDARD BRAND N 
Trade . on General Balety aoe 
Teal cent off Black or Cd Poel 
ED “WILLIAMS 451 8. Saginaw at Raeburn 
Auto Services ORR eee ee   
    NEW PIANOS ———   HAGGERTY LUMBER & SUPPLY 
1947 ning ihre manwey. 
Walled Lake, Michigan 
Weekdays 7 a.m. to 6 p.m 
SATURDAYS 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. 
FOR SALE I used oil furnace. 1 used gas 
furnace. 1 used space heater. 
5-9259. 
AI PRESSURE STEAM JENNY. 
$150. %, % and 1 HP. Single 
phase electric motors, coeee. Reo 
Tiamg lawn mower. $95. OR 3-7700 
JELLED MAGIC This paint needs no stirring, will 
not drip,-sag or run. Rub Jer or 
oil base. Fundreds of colors to   
    
  
  
in. l3c+ Springling systems fig- 
ured. G. A. Thompson, 7005 M59 
_West. Open Eves. 
~ ANCHOR FENCES No money down FHA approved. 
FREE ESTIMATES FE 5-7471 
A COMPLETE UNIT HOLLAND 
gas automatic furnace, BTU out- 
put 60,000. MI 6-8050. 
A-l1 WINDOWS, DOUBLE HUNG, 
lider & picture windows. Reas. 
irect from manufacturer. EM 
3-8379. or EM 3-8003. 
ASPHALT PATCH 
Stee] Clothes Posts $10 
Steel provers? Culvert .. : 
SEWER PIPE — DRAIN TILE 
Pe codelig Wood Preservative, $1.10 
MURIATIC ACID $1.67 
SCREEN DOORS reer 
UTILITY WHITE . 
BLAYLOCK 
COAL & BUILDING SUPPLY CO. 
81 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 3-7101 
AVAILABLE NOW | Tavlor stee! overhead doors 8X7's 
and 9x7's. Factory seconds. Also 
a few used doors reasonable. 
G&M Construction Company. 2260 
_ Dixie Highway. 
8ATHROOM FIXTURES, OIL & 
gas furnaces, hot water & steam 
boilers. Automatic water heater. 
Hardware, elec supplies, crock & 
tile. Galvanized copper, black, 
bain and fittings. Lowe Brothers 
eae Super Kemtone and Rust- 
EIGHTS SUPPLY 
2685 apes! Rd. FE 4-5431 
BOY'S SHOP-BUILT MODEL CAR. 
2 cycle. 449 h.p. engine. Call MI 
6-6983.   
    
  
  
.67 GAL. 
ima ‘a 
  
BOAT TRAILER. GARDEN TOOLS. 
lawn mower. Metal lathé. Bench 
‘saw. Wood lathe. Drill press. Ford 
4 tractor tools. Fruit jars and 
crocks. FE 2-1048. 
BUY AND SAVE _   
4” soll pipe 5° . $3.79 igth. 
3" soil . $3.38 Igth. 
3 outst 5 flush door . $12.95 
No. ? Oak flooring 65 M 
Complete 42° sink cabinet with 
wall cabinet, $81.95, 
Wolverine Lumber 120 8. Paddorx. FE pads 
BEEF AND PORK — HALF A 
quarters. Opdyke Mkt. FE seal 
CHICAGO COIN AUTOMATIC 
pool table. $60 6 pocket pool 
table $135. Pin ve eis a bowling 
_Mmachine $25. 
CULVERTS INSTA a RE- paired & repiaced. MA 6-2114. 
CASH WAY 
LUMBER PRICES STANLEY ALUMINUM WINDOWS 
Burmeister's 
NORTHERN. LUMBER 
EM 3-411   
  
    
  
DEEP FREEZE '51 STUDEBAKER. 
_FE 5-0016   
Excellent (Bargains New and used toys. clothes party 
supplies for children and babies. 
New plastic ware. Canned vege- 
tables. Antique = ——— 
lights, outdoor epaiae fixtufes. 
Dresser. New carpeting. sofa at 
Canvas sunshades Foldin 
Fishing lures. ‘"' stee 
Elec. motors & mise. tools. Books 
and other good used items. All 
ficed for a quick sale. 9 a.m.- 
70 Kéieon FE 2-5289 
Esacteic LT LIGHT PULL-DOWN peag ‘2 Newest, exciting, modern 
light fixtures. Ideal lamp for stu- dents. $12.95 value, $6.95. Michi- 
    gaa. Flusrescent, 393 Orchard Lk. 
Ave.-%4, 
a 
oe 
é ~ 
    hhoose from 30 gal auto. gas heater, $44.95.) ° PAINT 
Cab. sinks and fittings, $54.95 up. 436 Orebard. B FDEL ® Fre 5.6180 Laundr sae with stand & fau- = 
Sy ‘SAV AVE PLUMBING JULY SALES 172 8. Saginaw. FE_ 5-2100 Several good ei inter Thess 
75 LB. PRESSURE CHESTED rs, some lastic pipe %% Inch 15c, 4% 9c. sickle pre eer & up. All machines 
have been checked and put in 
good running condition. Alse have 
special price on some new equip- 
ment. Let us show and demon- 
strate the right machine for ext 
requirments. We service wha 
sell, repair all] makes of canine 
and mowers. Evans uipment, 
6507 Dixie Hwy. Maple 56-7878 or 
OR 3-7924.   
KITCHEN CABINET SINKS. 
Slightly scratched 42°" model, 
$99 value, $4830 — while they 
last. Also terrific values on 54° 
and 66'' model. No phone orders 
please. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 
Orchard Lake -Ave.-5. 
LAVATORIES, CHROME MIXING faucets. $24.50 values. $14.95. Also 
bathtubs, toilets. shower stalls. 
Factory irregulars. ‘Terrific val- 
ues. Michigan Fluorescent, 397 
_Orehard Lake Ave.-1. 
LOVELY SINGER SEWING MA- 
chine with cabinet. Yours for 
$41.20, cash balance or $6 per mo. 
Capitol Appl. FE _5-9407 
LAWN MOWERS ‘SHARPENED, Pick-up. PE 2-1311 
LOOK HERE and You'll Buy Here «   
  
  
  
Field Tile ...2..5...00....0.11€ Oa. 
Shelf boards .......... -.16c ft. 
Chloride ............. $2. ‘93 r 100 
Steel clothes post ........ 45 pr. 
Reedy mix concrete or mortar 
Svasecieess OL.20 DAG 
PIPE—BRICK—STEEL 
FHA Terms Free Estimates 
Open 8-5:30 MON. thru SAT. 
>UREEU> LUMBER TERIAL SALES 
5340 Highland Rd. «M-59) OR 3.7092 
-MARBLE TOPS 
epi roctangulse broken mar- 
ble tops. 2, or more pieces. 
Une for on table tops, ves- 
aes patios, fireplace hearths 
Etc. $10.00 each. 
WIGGS 24 W. HURON   
  
W GALVANIZED PIPE 
vein are jena tis Loe toc ft. 
a 21-ft. lengths 17%e ft. 
AVE PLUMBING 8UPPLY 
172 8 Saginaw FE_5-2100 
REY INISEED PANELING | 
mend per ft. 
Bire ee a ao ter 
Cherry go id Pola per ft. 
BENSON LUMBER CO: 
NEW NIAGARA CYCLO-PAD WITH 
pene unit. Cost $250; take over 
ee re ments of of git 8 pis * equity   
  
  
  
PLYWOOD SPECIA ry 
  a “ 
Aluminum sidii * 00 Ali so 
bese wt i. * 58 
1488 Baldwin Ave. res 9-2543 
PI odin TABLES, USED LUMBER, 
ds b ends. OR 31-6022. 5011 Wal-   
dor 
ea aon Go, miele aed AND 
deep wei; an ae 13 gal. 
ae A ds 
PENNY PAINT. SALE. Instle & Outaige White ST GALLON   
$3.98 
3.99 
9 8. Saginaw $20.00 down-3 years to w 
have the latest modeler ge the 
famous von mone ine. 
8Ic 34 8. Telegraph 
, Across from Tel-Huron     
Piano-Organ Bargains 
Player plano. Exc. cond. 
Practice piano, $50. =? 
Small Baby Grand piano, like new. 
Small upright plano, $150. 
Demonstrator. limed oak val sba 2 
Manual, 13 pedal board .. $695 
GALLAGHER’S MUSIC COME eA Se 
18 E. Huron 
RENT, A PIANO WITH ope 
to buy. All money paid will be 
applied ay down payment. 
LAGHER'S 
18 E. gure * FE 4-0566 E @-0566   ting hay, piel and corn. Will de 
liver, OA 8-217 
ALL KINDS te HAY, wal ta   
  twine, manUre and lumber 
«, 5-0666. 
CUSTOM COMBINING & BALING 
with self-propelled combine. Can 
furnish trucks. OA 8-2178, Ox- 
_ford 
__For Sale. Livestock 8 89 POPPA 
1-2 HORSE TRAILER FOR SALE 
or swap for what have you? 
Call after 5 p.m. UL 2-4353. 
6 WKS. so PIGS. 1305 M15 NA. NA- 
tional 17-2375 
8 MILK COWS. MIXED BREEDS, 
bangs tested. 1841 Burreus Rd., 
ome off Sherwood, off Sash-   
  
  
  CHILDREN'S SHETLAND PONY, 
_ $200. UL_2-2947. 
NICE 3RD GENERATION 
pee erad Jersey bull asi, oh 
  RIDING HORSES. 370 Ww. AVON. 
_Rochester Mic!     
USED LOWRIE ORGAN 
Large model with glide pedal,: 
excellent condition. Guaranteed. 
MORRIgs M 
4468 Telegraph 32-0567 
____ Across from _Te!-Huron WE BUY SPINET & CONSOLE 
piano: 
GALLAGHER’S 
18 E. Huron FE 4-0566 
Wurlitzer Spinet Organ Slightly used, beautiful maho 
rie finish with bench. $969,” 
WE CARRY THE FINEST     
  
WIEGAND MUSIC C R- 
MIRACLE MILE BAZAAR AREA 
Piano Tuning -— Organ Repair 
Phone FE 2- 4924 
Sale S > Store Equipment _ 81 
6 FT. LIGHTED GLASS SHOW 
__ case, FE 2-3251 or FE 2-3220 
FORMICA TABLES. USED _ AB 
loaners only, For bar or restau- 
Hore Priced r se for quick sale. 
1-3 h.p. Hobart food cutter and 
stand with t chosen and 
vegetable slicer attachments, plus 
accessories. MA 6-6683. 
Sale Sporting Goods 82 
AQUA LUNGS, NEW AND USED, compressed air. 80 Parkharst. 
BEAR BOW. 35 LB. GRISLEY. 
Never used. Reas. MA. 5-7101. 
Clarkston. 
ENGLISH LEATHER RIDING 
boots, size 9'2. Also all wool 
twill icing breeches size 36. Both 
in good condition. First $20 takes. 
FE 4-5961. _ 
USED. GOLF SET. NEVER Matched and registered, Compiete 
with bag. Cost $80; sell $35. Pro- 
y cart, $10. FE 8-6819 
GUNS = BUY. SELL, TRADE. 
Manley Leach, 10 Bagley. 
GUNs - MODERN OR ANTIQUE. 
me ge. repair and scope mount- urr-Shell. 375 8. Telegraph. 
monies CAMP TRAILER. GOOD 
cond. Reas. FE 5-6722. 
ONE 9'7''x9'7"" UMBRELLA TENT. 
Good cond. $35. FE 2-8517. 
82A Bait, Minnov Minnows, Etc Etc. & 2A 
CRAWLERS, 2 DZ. SOc; RE D- 
worms, 60 for 45c: big worms, 60   
  
  
    
  
  
  
  
for 50c. Tackle. Also elean seed 
work pants from 3c. Open 
_Gays, 389 Orchard Lk. Ave. 
_ Sand, ( Gravel & ‘Dirt 84 _84 
DAY SERVICE. BLACK DIRT, 
fill_sand, and gravel. FE 5-7645. 
10A STONE & OVERSIZE STONE, $2 Yd. = crushed i. mason 
sand, sand p soil 6335 
_Seehabaw,  eiareten Pua 56-2161. 
2-1 BLACK Pas TOP sOIL, FILL   
  sand,,shredded. Will deliver Sun- 
day OR 
A-1 ACK DIRT. TOP 8OIL, 
Fill sand. fame A peat humus. 
FE 5-4758 
STONE. 
Lyle Conklin, 
BLACK DiRT 5 s 5. DELIVERED #10 50 Vic. Baldwin & Walton. 
FE 4-8543 
BLACK DIRT FILL, § SAND |! AND 
_gravel. OE 8-087, FE 8-37 
BLACK DIRT. TOP SOIL. 
dirt & manure. 1 to 5 yds. de- 
livered 775 Geott Lake Rd, FE 
_£-4228 or OR_ 3.0165. 
CHOICE FARM TOP Y¥bs $10, Delivered. FE 46588, 
PROCESSED _ ROAD GRAVEL. 
Leaded daily. Gale Rd. at Pon-     tine Lake. OR 3-652). Wanted Livestock 9 90 
NTED: PIGS & YOUNG CAT- 
Mile. Forrest Jones, MA 5-0016, 
91 ~~ For _Sale | Poultry | 
RABBITS ALL SIZES. WH HITE, 
Black, Brown. Cheap. FE 4-1319. 
_Sale Far Farm Produce 92 
APPLES. TRANSPARENT & RED. 
Astrachans. Homestead Orchards, 
5460 Orchard Lk. 
CANNED rat i 
UGE. CULTIVATED BLUEBERRIES. 
By quart or case. 350 Wise Rd. 
_ Commerce. EM_3-4072, TRANSPARENT ASTRAKHAN AP- 
ley. Fresh produce. Risesbeey 5 
330 Clarkston Rd. Lake Ori 
Sale Farm 1 Equipment 9 93   
  
  
  
‘86 FORD TRACTOR WITH SHER- 
man shift’ Tip-top condition. See 
Frank Seerere 1010 Adams Rd., 
_Rocheste>. Mic 
used. Proulx Oliver Paes on M24 
_Just_north of Oxford. 
SPECIAL WE HAVE THE new 
EASY TIME_ PAYMENTS FREE COFFEE KING BROS. 
Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke P_ 40734 41112 
USED SPECIALS GARDEN TRACTORS. PRICED 
from $75 
Lawn mowers & Roto Tillers 
HOUGH TEN & SONS J. 1. cone & New Idea Dealer ROCHEST! cP OL 1-9761 
USED JOHN DEERE NO. 25 COM- 
bine. Davis Machinery,. NAtiona) 
49-3292. Ostonville. 
For Sale Housetrailers 95 
’86 ALMA, CASH OR TERMS. DAY. gall ; oF 3-6268, eves. call On 
"86 66 PONTIAC | oad EP, 38 BASS Exc. 
cond., . FES 
"$5 aPaRTAA a FT. ane BATA 
foe! awe Extra nice, 2530 
‘ented sell, Make of- 
Re 0311 days; or nights 
FE 23085 065. 
Lah 
$1900.   
  
  
  
  
  
1956 MOBILE HOME 
trailer. Like new. EM 
_ 34501, 
969 10 x 50 GREAT LAKES Di- luxe, 16 foot carpeted living 
‘room, awnings, jacks, the works. 
Sell or trade For appointment 
_call FE_2-0023. 
BOB HUTCHINSON 
SERVING GREATER DETROIT & 
Pontiac for the past 13% -years 
and still gorge a Bag ~ gt Aa 
the veryebest buys Pontiac 
Chiefs & Detroit Mobile Homes. 
NOW ON DISPLAY, 9 different 
floor plans in th 
ALL NEW 1960 PONTIAC CHIEF DETROITS. Also saves hund -< of dollars on   
  epee of 1959 models on Open 
lot. Up to 7 ears fas aes 
7 days .. a ally. 10 
to § Sun 
BOB HUTCHIN ‘SON 
<n Pilites arth of Peatige +” Drayton Plains OR 3-1203 POR RENT, NEW 15 PT. VACATION T - trailer, 1263 Venice Ct. off Cass el, ® hon 
Lake Rd, FE 2-5459. er $186. owe runs- 
FOR SALE OR 15 _ West. 
{ vacation trailer. PE 4-6448. EVINR) W. } 
sTRSTREAM : — gust 
ee life. ‘See them and get|~ stocs of 16° Weg 
a demonstration at Warner T mahogany windshield, 
er Bales, Ww. Hurea.. F steering walk thru seat in front to join one of Wally Byam’s ex- caer gan 20’ transom. caravans). om one of «the ~ = 
COMPLETELY TAL = trailer for sale. OL 24031, Roch- | LAtk. _Sauery. in ae 
oeet. Ib capacity tip-up A-frame trailer. ce ON List pricg $2115—Now only $1395 
NEW --’ 1950 Bmpire tivergias run- oben al Somertng length 
seats, bow and stern light hard- 
=are ski rings, boat cover, 1958 
Evinrude ote , Trem 
ealeas batte battery box and 
Ajax 1250-lb A- tame Uipwup trail- 
er. Ali for $1450 
Come out took over 
our sagieie. selection of 
posts Eve , ae to fit your 
boating needs. Take a Tide 
our “lemonstrators and 
assure ool of complete 
satisfaction. Financing avail- 
able with only 10 per cent 
gees 24 months to 
Take M50 to West Hi 
WSON'S 
ico Lake. Phene MAin 
are Open every night 
  
  
  
  BOA eTOn eee Ww p orons — 
ew 5 
OTORS & SERVICE 
|Marine equipment & sport goods 
“CRUISE-OUT BOAT 5. 
63 E. Walton Bivd F 
PE 84402 ly 8 "til 6 
CENTURY 
Chris Craft Cavalier 
CRUIS-ALONG 
Holida Atos epee: gees 
INLAND LAKES SALES 3127_W. Huron PE ¢7121 
PF IBERGLAS— ‘DO IT YOURSELF’   
1661 8. RAPH RD. 
1 Mile N. Miracle Mile FE 3-7688 
Opposite Pico eres Fashion Shop   
USED “MOTORS 
SLAYBAUGH’S 
JOHNSON 30 HP. ELECTRIC starter. Will demonstrate. Make 
offer. OR 3-6527. 
| JOH NSON MOTORS Star Craft boats. Gator and Alr- 
ee | trailers. Everything for the 
ek   
OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES 396 Orchard Lake Ave. PE 2-8020 
MERCORY M D NPHY 
Poste. New and used, We trade. Bar 
MAZUREE pry SALES 
Cor. 8. Bivd. & Saginaw 
u r —_ 
trols and new 1 
& trailer All for $1,005. 
Seadg © Otnte atA si con 
Eriurele, Oot y $695. . 
$164. 12 ft. —— boa 
ft. siento 50; $235 
at, DOW $179.80: D a : Cergias, 
decked. runabout, $ 
KELLY’S HARDWAR: 
3004 Auburn As Adams 2-8811   
RENT SELL: PONTOON BOAT 
Munro’s | Boats, Waterford Mill Pond   
  CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE 
car. es Tebored Zuck Ma- chine Shop 23 Hood. Phone FE 
SRANESHA INDING IN THE ear. Cylinder reboring. Wally's 
Crankshaft Service. OLive 1-0263. 
Sale Motor Scooters 100 
56 CUSHMAN EAGLE. $200. 6062 
Hatchery Ril, 
"$7 MOPED. 
EM 3-307l. 
ALLSTATE 3 H.-P. SCOOTER. EX cond. a only 850 miles. "100; 
MI 4-2174 
CUSHMAN “EAGLE — JUNKING parts. OR 3-7700. + 
CAMBRET EA ond RORSCOOTER. _'57,_Good . $200. FE 8-1428. 
NEW & Wh USED S COENMA SCOOT- Mere, 230-1 E. Pike. PE 4-4246, 
69 ALLSTATE. EXCELLENT CON- dition. Sharp. FE 4-7193 
"58 DELUXE, REA- P aod   
  
  
  
  
    ALLSTATE 
sonable. FE 8-1114. 
1988 MO-PED, EXCELLENT COND. . FE 5-1840 
For Sale Bicycles 
BOY GIRL'S 26" — 
135 we chicago. FE 4-6918. 
ROLLPAST Bicrciss. At 
sizes and repair on es, 
: 8. U. Gain: 331 
Edith,   
  
  
  
  
  
Boats & Accessories 103 
1.1 HP EVINRUDE, PERFECT cond. 2 wheel boat aller ae 16 
in._wheel. Best offer. FE _5-6070. 0 HP. JOHNSON, 5.4987 MODEL, good cond 
lo HP Santora TOTOR. GOooD 
_cond, $95, EM 3-490" 
i2 FT METAL BOAT AND ae 
h.p, motor. Good condition. $100 _ EM _3-3930. 
i2 FT. MOLDED PLYWOOD RUN- 
about .fiberglassed, 25 HP elec- 
ric Evifrude, $495. OR 
35-7700, + 
14 FOOT PLYWOOD BOAT. MOT- or and trailer, $125. FE 4-3604. 
4 FT. “WOLVERINE RONABOOT. ef trailer. 
FE_5-9560.   
  
    
aller. 
  
us PT. CENTURY RUNABOUT > 
pee Evinrude motor & traile 
__ $200. 2371 Bilver Circle. OR 32196. 
ia} 47 BOAT TRAILER 865, FE 
14 PT. YELLOW JACKET. 25 H.P. 
evinrude, remote counrele. and 
trailer, like new or swap for 
ats pickup. 40424 or MY 
5 "56 THOMPSON. electric LM trailer, 
ete $605. 
‘Evinrude. $325. Both 
EM sent 1024 Sherbrooke, Com- 
__ merce, Mich. 
16 FE. ROU M POR OUND BOTTOM 
strip boat & trailer. 
8-0145, 
HP. MER- 
Aston trail- 
1% Texas 16 LYMAN, 40 
& 6   
  
  
  
YT 
ony bares Hel motor. 
cond. 
Rochester. Between 4 
=   
REAL BUY 
16 foot jeans runabout, 1958 
Johnson 38 ia elec. —— 
full sguipped ready 2, 
incl. 1958 wor witen "sie, lad: 
life preserver 
1 etc. Per 
etn per $1,195. Call MA 102, SAVE $500 ON DUNPHY WAYPFAR- 
er, gp lapstrake, Mark 78 sh 
— = tandem trail 
ter prices on all our boats a 
= mn 
pee —— See be 
are den ~ location es dn eaves 703 oa 
SPORT CENTRE 15210 Hot. 
LY fy ikb. HOLLY. MELR 
  
TONY'S MARINE FOR EVIN- 
kx rude Motors 23 yrs. r ir ex- 
perience. 2695 Orchard 
WATER SKI SPECIAL Bs LL negara d Paty os 
oo.   
t 
a 188 rraiue. r price, 3st 
Oakland Marine Exch. 
7 8: 
e Dealer 
Harrington Boat J Works BANK FINAN 
n 8 Ev J 
wiD.? USED —AL MINUM CA- MA_5-1922, Clark: 
‘103A noe 
~Fibergias BQATS FIBERGLASSED, ALL 
types fiberging work. Auto rust _Rints, ae ead bodies. 
~ For Sale Airplanes 104 
het otter. OR FINI 
Transportat’n Offered 105 
    
  
  
  
  
      
  CARS DAILY TO ALA- 
bama. Philadelphia. Connecticut, 
ance. FE 23-3215. 
Caufornia $00, Hawaii, $80, N a , New 
York, $19 each way. Ferry Serv- ice OR 3- se _— = 
Apiaraiee irae fart = e 5 
PE 27-5664, after 6 p.m. _ 
TRUCK GOING NORTH, PART 
load .either way, FE 5-6806. 
__Wanted Used Cars 106 
After All! MONEY TALKS ! So shop the rest, then drive out 
for ‘the test and. prove to’ your- 
self the 
ace oer 
paid at the 
DIXIE “OK LOT 
Se 
J. LIBERTINE 
Jia HARTLEY 
Dixie “OK” Lot Dixie Hwy., near Sashabaw 
___DRAYTON PLAINS, MICH. 
- ATTENTION! “WHY SETTLE FOR LESS?” 
WE'RE PAYING 
TOP $$$ DOLLAR 
GLENN'S   
  
  
FE 4179?   
battery MA 4-2187. _. 
ALUMA-CRAFT BOAT. MERCURY Mark @5 Motor. Heavy duty trail- 
Steering wheel, water skis, 
_ FE +4683, 
JOHNSON, Nace nace 
CRO 
aid Wick a OR 4¢021 1875 Highland Rd: 
_ Mss at Wms. Lake Rd. 
BOAT, & TRAILER. $500. 
after 5:   
In- 
cludes hardware. Worry bervinn, 
Inc., 6120 Highland Rd.   
? 
LIKE A REAL CAR 
BARGAIN? Lots of ’em | 
in the Want Ads! 
  $2 RICHARDSON 18 11 INBOARD. 
95 ny Chrysler. Good cond. $1.- MOTOR SALES OR 3-0004. D den cusuecte 952 WEST HURON 
Sat & Sun PE 4-737) 
1959 MERCURY, MARK 15-A. .60 
HP. Controls. Gas tank, 12 volt 
CASH 
DON'T LOSE 
YOURCAR We will show YS" nat = to ” 
bone ee 
"Eddie Steele   
  7105 ORCHAR RD. HA 5 
KEEGO FE 5-020 ‘PE 22520 
é 
*   
  tlie 
aga “i atid ian i il itl a aa 
     
  
ee 
eT 
ee 
ee 
a 
eT 
TRATRe 
pon 
Ee 
MEME 
Gk 
car 
eT 
te ee 
    
| FE 2-818], | _SRUIRTY-TWO he THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. AUGUST 3, 1959 
  
_—Miseted Used Cars 106| For Sale Used Trucks 107 f 
_ For Sale Used Cars 110   
       
  ‘CASH F BURG T XN 
SMe Srna ie HOMER HIGHT NTRS ; |Oxford, Michigan on. 8-2528 
GET FHE MOST 
FOR IT! 
And the most is 
what you get at 
JEROME “Bright Spot” , Ayes Lake at Cass” 
pen FE "til   
» Top 
$S$ 
Paid 
FOR GOOD USED CARS 
Russ Dawson 
232 S. Saginaw St. 
~ NOW READ > 
THIS BRING YOUR CAR HERE FOR 
TOP DOLLAR |   
WE NEED 500 CARS FOR. OU 
OF-STATE SHOP THE REST | 
BUT THE BEST AT 
AVFRITI'S 2020 Dixie Hwy 
PE 2-987" FE 4-6896 
OUR CUSTOMERS DEMAND 
GOOD 
“CLEAN CARS” 
WE'LL GIVE YOU 
$$$ CASH $$$ | FOR YOUR EQUITY 
A GOOD DEPENDABLE CAR 
BILL SPENCE “RAMBLER” & SERVICE - FE 8454)   
2 8 SAGINAW 
Dex Kennedy AND GET THE 
TOP DOLLAR | FOR YOUR CAR 
CASS-OAKLAND Pontiac’s Newest Lot 
312. W. Montcalm FE 8-8288 
NEXT TO AVENUE   
TOP BUCK - JUNK CAR TRUCK. PONTIAC WASTE FE 2-0209|   
See M & M Motor Sales | 
For sa? Dine Hey, op later model cars.’ 
2: OR 3-1603' 
TOP PRICE Lene JUNE CARS   
  22 AUBURN; 
Used Truck Parts 106A 
USED TRUCK PARTS ALL MAKES AND MODELS 
aTS 
2635 Auburn Ave, FE 4-6632 
__Used Auto Parts 106B 
PONTIAC STRAIGHT 8 heel 
excellent condition, 
FE 66546 or EM 34113. 
“49 TO   
  
  
  
  OLDSMOBILE | 
faiq with four 2 barre] carbs, 
will sell or trade for two 4 barfel 
manifolds. Phone EM 3-8113 or 
  
For Sale Used Trucks 107 
183 GMC. ONE TON PANEL 
truck. FE 2-8469 after 5 p.m. 
SELECT The Truck You Need 
‘48 PONTIAC HEARSE Just like new. $395 
1950 FORD Ye ton pickup. Black. $243 
‘51 INTERNATIONAL 12 foot metro. $295 
532 FORD F-6 14 qf. aluminum van and Hft gate. 
$995 a 
‘51 INTERNATIONAL 5 yard dump. 2 speed and clean. 
$595 
*53 DODGE Pickup, red. $478 
*53 FORD % ton panel. V-8. $495 
*34 CHEVROLET + 12 ft. stake, sharp. $795 
‘34 INTERNATIONAL Pickup, good rubber. $490 
34 FORD % ton with utility body. $745   
  
‘34 INTERNATIONAL | 14 foot van. $795 
'55 FORD F-100 Pickup, 8 cylinder. $745 
$5 CHEVROLET 2 tom chassis, 102 CA. $795 
"55 CHEVROLET 2 ton, 12 ft. van, sharp. $1095 
5 INTERN ATION. AL 
12 ft. van. $695 
55 DODGE eis ft. van. $1098 
56 FORD Courier, sharp. $795 
'87 FORD F-100 Pickup, 8 ft. box. $995 
"57 FORD: F-100 Panel. 6 cylinder. $1095 
ine ARE JUST A FEW 
HE MANY MORE AT oF 
Turner's 
Truck Center 
BE SURE AND SEE 
FOR A DEAL THAT'S RIGHT! 
464 6. WOODWARD 
BIRMINGHAM MI 4-7500 
48 HUDSON FICE MUST BE 
seen to be appreciated. MA 5.1007 Bene’ ot 1c 
v-8, 
fer.   
tous 
10 N'T PASS UP, 
Mt YW EY! Sel! unneeded 
belongings for cash 
through Classified Ads! ! 
/ JUNK AND: 1950 CuRVY. 
ahiondcita $004 _cond 
e! 
| an TON PICKUP, FE" 5-9120._. 
1946 we 180 IN CHEVROLET DUMP Se Good mechanical condition,   
  
15985 MODE! IHC. 2 TON TRUCK 
Wr HYDRAUL ¢ STILT 
| DOWN BED IDEAL FOR HAUL- 
\ INC HE E ENT. IN 
| A-1 CON I TO SELL. 
| KING BROS. FE 4.0734. FE 4-1112 
i6 IDE TRUCK BODY ~ STEEL 
with lift- -gate. $125. Smith Moving 
Co: 45 James’ Bt. 
  1 CHEVY PANEL L TRUCK. LOW mileage, very clean, reas. FE 
4-3475, 
NEW 
‘39 Dodge Pickup 
$1695 This price includes all standard 
factory equipment and federal tax 
Michigan sales tax and h- | 
cense extra. (Limited time offer.) 
RAMMLER-DALLAS 
1001 N. MAIN + aaa 
ee _OL 29111 be 
 Pontiac’s 
Truck Center 
GMC Factory Branch 
OAKLAND AT CASS 
___ Auto: Insurance 108 
PL & PD FOR MOST CARS. $9 60 | on mos. Pmts. of $4.99 ea. 
FE * 63536. Eves FE 24353. 
| Foreign & Spts. Cars s 109 
11855 SKODA NO MONEY DOWN. 
| like new Lucky Auto Sales. 193 
S. Saginaw. FE 4-1006. 
| LARGEST STOCK OF DUNLOP 
rted sports and antique tires 
=I ich. A sizes to solve srg 
car owner prosems: Market Tire 
Co, 8-0424. 
~ For Sale Used Cars 110 
‘389 AUSTIN 4 DOOR, RADIO AND 
heater. This car sold for $2370 
new, 4 months ago. Sale price, 
$200 down. $47.50 per month. Gets 
over 40 miles per gallon. BIR- 
MINGHAM RAMBLER. 666 
WOODWARD, MI 6-3900. 
FACTORY BRANCH 
35 BUICK 2 Door HARDTOP 
Radio & Heater Dynaflow 
. $1095   
  
  
  
  
  
Pontiac 
Retail 
| store FE 3-/117 65 MT. CLEMENS ST BEHIND THE POST OFFICE 
‘1954 PUICK HARDTOP | A mice clean Century, clean in- 
| side and out, radio, heater, auto- 
matic shift. A one owner you 
will like. 
PEOPLE'S AUTO SALES 
68 Oakland FE 2-2351   '35 BUICK 2 DOOR. RADIO AND 
heater. A very clean car for the 
ne person. Only $795. 
Terms, up to 24 months on bal- 
ance. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER. 666 S. WOODWARD, MI 6-3900. 
‘55 BUICK HT., 5. SMITH MO- 
tors. Crooks & Auburn. 
$4 BUICK. CENTURY. ¢ DE 
25 
NERS_ USED ‘CARS 
222 West Montcalm | 
"61 BUICK. Seer RUN- 
ning condition. $100. 2706 Hart-   
  
  line. avaa Twp.   155 ony FE" sae? CONDI- 
PALA. FoR 
FE ae at citer _OR 3-146 after 6. 
“VACATION SPECIAL PECIALLY PRICED FOR bi or FORD 1959 
309 8-cylinder. 4-door sedan 
with Fordomatic, radio. heater. 
white tires. 
BEATTIE. Fed mero _ Since 1930" 
5806 OR 3-1291 
At ine. Tiroplight _ in Waterford 
‘32. CHEVROLET BEL AIR. NO 
money down. Community Motor 
Sales PE 8-4530. 
~ 1953 ~ CHEVROLET 
REPOSSESSION $125 full price, No cash needed. 
$7.50 month. Mr. Bell, King Auto. 
TO 5s CHE V¥ MECHANICALLY 
__berfect. RL & H H_ wsw. FE 8-9339. 
64 CHEVY DELRAY COUPE $295 
NERS USED .CARS 
Bs) Ww Montcalm 
PONTIAC AUTO 
BROKERS   
  
  
"3? Chev. Wagon., 4 dr. V-8 . $1595 
56 Buick RM, 4 dr. Air-cond.. .$1495 
'51 Ford Custom 2 dr. FOM ..$1395 
36 Ford V-8, @ dr. Wgn. ....$1295 
56 Buick Spec. 4 dr. HT. ... $1295 
56 Chev. 2 dr., 6, Del Ray ....$1095 
‘56 Plymouth Bel., 6, Aute ,.$995 
58 Buick Century HT ....-...8095 
55 Pod Pairlane 8 .......... $895 
53 Studebaker 2 dr. 8, ee: $ 695 
34 Pontiac, 2 dr. : 
‘34 Chev. 4 dr. $595 
"33 Chew. 2 dr 
“63° Mercury 
"33 Ford, 4 dr., 6 
‘31 Pontiac ., 
‘33 Plymouth 
  a $95 
PE 4-9100 1260 Perry at Madison — 
‘35. CHEVROLET _ Pee AIR 4-     
DOOR. V-8. POWERGLIDE, RA- 
DIO & HEATER. ABSOLUTELY 
NO MONEY DOW Assume 
payments of $27.24 per mo. Call 
Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks at MI 
4-7500. Harold Turner Ford _ 
‘$4 2 DR. CHEVY. BEL AIR. R. PG. R&H. MY 3-1915.     
"33 CHEYROL 210 2-DR,. RA- 
DIO & TER. ABSOLUTELY 
No MONEY DOW Assume 
oli of sie per mo. Call 
edit Mgr. Mr. Parks at Sa 
4-7500 Harold Turner Ford. 
‘33 CHEVROLET, SHARP. CLEAN 
Bel Air. Best offer over $350. 7813 
_ Elizabeth Lk. Rd. after 5:30. 
1956 CONVERTIBLE. PONTIAC 8, 
Hydra. R&H, new. tires. Very 
sharp body. Can_be seen at 203 
Eliz. Lk Ave. FE 2-3682. 
‘54 WINDSOR CHRYSLER. 
Clean. Mechaniealiy very good. 
Good rubber. FE 5-1378 
‘55 DODGE CONVERTIBLE, WIRE 
wheels. Radio & heater. 
matic. Special interior. 
In fact, 
. P HAM RAMBLER, WARD, MI 6-3900. 
1954 DODGE, 4 DOOR 
REPOSSESSION   
  
  
  
    
  
  SACES OF HAM 
% 
Cet wl 
etenes       
      
  
For Sale Used Cars 110, | 
'51 FORD CONVERT. GOOD COND 
saga Church St: Clarkston. MA 
53 FORD CUSTOM   
-DR. V-8. 
payments of $11.46 per mo. Call 
redit Mgr. Mr. Parks at MI 
4-1500. Harold Turner Ford. 
1933 FORD, FULL FLATHEAD, $395. 
At Sunoco station coraer Auburn 
and Adams B 
1959 FORD CUSTOM 2 DR. FORD- 
O-Matic. Heater. washers, com- 
es deluxe interior. $179 or any- 
bai 'N value down. $55.97 month- 
4-761   
  
ne Jones Fleet Dept. 
  
VACATION SPECIAL Priced to sell now, beautiful 1959 
Ford Fairlane 500 Club Victoria. 
Pully equipped including 225 H.-P. 
engine. Cruis-o-matic transmis- 
sion, radio, heater, whitewalls. 
Foser ening, windshield wash- 
ers, 
BEATTIE 
  
  
  
  
  
  
sion. 
FACTORY OFFICIAL’S CAR 
Larry Jerome ania = eo DEALER 
52 FORD VICTORIA . 
GA oe USED CARS 
. Montcalm 
YES   $195 
  
            Community Motor Sales 
i ine ot Quality Used oo 
   
    Hornet ......... 
| 1953 Olds BB... S$ 495 
7 Ford overdrive ......... $1295 
1957 Buick convert. Power $1995 
1955 Ford, new motor 895 
lee Pontiac Hardtop, ee $1005 
954 Merc. Sun Valley ...... 695 
ipsa Ford Ranch Wa on 695 
1954 Nash, bar aoa f 3 495 
1954 Pord V-8 ....,.... 495 1953 Plymouth hardtop $ 395 1953 Fordomatic $ 305 
1952 Pontiac sedan .... . $ 150 
1955 Pontiac Cat., one owner . 995 
1949 Pontiac Sed. delivery ... $ 150 
COMMUNITY. 
MOTOR SALES, INC. Home of quality used cars 
Auburn at E Oe FE 8-4530   
‘344 BUICK HARDTOP, $5 DOWN. 
No credit problems at Eddie 
Steele Ford, 2705 Orchard Lake 
Road, Keego Harbor, FE 2-2529. 
‘33 BUICK SPECIAL. Leta) DE- 
— car. EM 3-0081. H. Rig-   
  
1956 OLDs . CONVERTIBLE. 
pely seamed: Beautiful naa 
5 
1954 Buick super 2 dr. Hardtop. 
$545 Red & black..1 owner ..... 
1953 Pontiac .2 dr. Hydramati 
one mechanical cand: oS i: 
1957 Buick. 4 dr. sedan. Dyna- 
flow. Radio & heater ai 1 
2 OWNER 2. wos: 2 seca cox -.. $1495 IT'S TRUE FOR REAL VALUE 
SEE — 
-HAUPT 
1956 FORD 4 DR. VICTORIA. 
V8. FORDOMATIC. RADIO & 
HEATER. TIRES. 
WH & BLACK. 1 OWNER 
CAR. Dow 
24 MOS. ON BA 
Many More to Choose From 
Stop out and buy. 
M15, 1 mile north U.8. 
MAple -5566 or erry 5- ha 
Open nights ‘til 9 
Heardenbira GUARANTEED USED CARS 
‘31 FORD, CUSTOM 300, V8, FOR- 
domatic, all white. WSW, Extra 
pice vor ee ee $1295 
"67 Chevrolet, Belaire, 4-dr. Wen. 
Radio, heater WSW, powerglide, 
power steering & brakes. Black 
& white outside, Red & Black 
ob crinuEooren CenS $ 
to choose *“ from 
Corner Cass & Pike FE 5-7398 
87 FORD, 8, 9- anteneer station- 
wagon. OR 3-3   
  
  
WE THINK 
WE HAVE THE 
BEST 
    HOMER HIGHT MTRS. | “15. minutes from Pontia 5 
, Oxford, ee =e “s. 2528 
3 BUICK. i 
R EPOSSESSION ¢ ptes full price. No cash needed. 
| 
ie   
| 
— yt . Mr. Bell, King Auto 
  
= OIE ROADMASTER. GOOD 
_Tunning cond. $100. EM 3-6106 
33. CADILLAC. POWER STEER. ing & brakes, good. 
*56. Panel clean and good. $195 
53 Merewey hardtop. $395. 
Also °53 Chev. & ord, : 
|_.'53 Pontiac and ‘51 Che 
|Manv repaia Finance ciccuamed! 
;/ECONOMY C ARS 22 Auburn 
, 1952 CHEV. KING AUTO. 115 
8. Saginaw. 8-0402. 
‘35 CHEV. REBUILT. MOTOR IN 
00d condition FE 45268 
| 1961 CHEVY, $95 KING ‘AUTO. 1 115 
= )_ Saginaw. FE  8-0402. 
82 CHEVROLET. LIKE 1 NEW. RE- 
uilt motor, very clean, shown at. 
Opdyke & Perry. Kimball & Sons | 
Gas station. 
33 CHEVROLET BEL AIR HAR. 
op. $5 down. No. credit prob- 
lems at Eddie Steele, Ford, 2705! 
_ Orchard Lk. Rd., Keego Harbor, | 
| FE 2259   
  $95. 
  
  
  
FACTORY BRANCH |: tree ~ ~yr ~ . 
5) CHEVROLET 
BEL AIR 4 DOOR 
Radio & Heater. 
stick Straight | 
. . . 
Retail 
| + Store FE 3-7117 / 
: REMIND THE POST OFFICE . 
| Exe, cond. FE 5-1580 
‘4 CHEVROLET, ~ 9-PASSENGER | ; Wagon. %§ down No credit yh a 
| lems at “fddie Steele Ford. 2705 
Orehard ‘gill Road Keego Har- 
ter FE 2.2529 
3 CHEVROLET BEL AIRE 
REPOSSESSION full price No cash needed, $168 | 
gi0.08 vf Tics Mr. Bell. ci 
ahEW — Tub aLA— CONVERT. kxe cond UL 2-417. 
\'33 CHEV. VERY {G00D NO RUST $295. EM 3-0061. H. Riggins       $1095 
Pontiac } SELECTION 
IN TOWN 
Se e For Yourself 
ALL CARS 
HAND 
SELECTED AND ; 
READY FOR 
THE HIGHWAY op ees Cee eres Your POR) dealer Bince 1930" sie month. Mr. Bell, King A 5806 Dixie Highway OR 3-1291 insi DE SOTO. os. @ AUTO. __At the stoplight in Waterford 
: KIN 1957 FORD CUSTOM. 2 DR.. V8. 
115_5. Saginaw. FE _8-0402. R&H, by original owner $1,150. 
$3 } DODGE V8, 33.000 MILES. FE 1400 Beverly, Walled Lake. Ph 
2-0367 MArket 4-2615. 
19st, | DODGE. $95. KING AUTO.,|*40 FORD FROM CALIF. NO 
115 8. Saginaw. FE 38-0402. rust, beautiful cond, "56 Olds. mo- 
1856 4 DOOR, FORD SEDAN, A-l tor, and full, LaSalle ttrans. Com- 
shape. radio & heater. $850. MU Bice truck and roll int. UL 4-3319. 2-1969. 
1950 FORD, $95. KING AUTO., 115| 1956 FORD FAIRLANE. 2 TON 
_ 8. Saginaw. FE 8-0402. m7 FOM. R&H. After 5, FE| 
38 FORD weet ees . $1595 66 FORD, BLACK. ‘53° “PONTIAC 
4 dr. Sedan. Automatic transmis-| 2-tone. FE 8-2963   
PRIVATE PARTY Clean 1957 Ford, take older car 
in trade, balance: $919. FE 32-0346.   55 FORD SEE AT 
Kimball & ies ‘Station. Perry & 
_ Opdyke.   "55 CROWN VICTORIA, POWER 
steering, brakes & windows. Ford-— 
omatic WSW. R&H, Rear win- 
rg! defrosters. OR 3-3439, after 
5:30.   
‘35 FORD 2 DOOR 
REPOSSESSION $395 full price. No cash needed. 
= oa . Mr. Bell, King Auto. 
  
"54 FORD. 2-DOOR, $5 DOWN. NO 
credit problems at Eddie Steele 
Ford, 2708 Orchard uate Road, 
__Keego Harbor, FE 2-2529 
63 FORD CONVERTIBLE, $5 down 
— No credit problems at Eddie 
Steele Ford, 2705 Orchard Lake 
Road, Keego Harbor, FE 2-2529. 
1954 FORD, V-8 
REPOSSESSION $268 full price. No cash needed. 
$15 month. Mr. Bell, King Auto. 
FE 8-0402.   
  
  1954 FORD 2 DR. CUSTOMLINE. 
Au o. transmission, R&H, WSW. 
$495 FE 5-8495. 
'58 FORD 2 DOOR. RADIO AND 
heater. Sale price, $1295. Hurry, 
won't last. Up to 36 months on 
BL INGHAM RAM- 
8. WOODWARD, MI   
balance. 
BLER, 
6-30900. 
SEE OUR SELECTION Of fine late mode! used cars. 
JACK COLE, INC. Dodge-Plymouth-Chrysler 
1000 W. Maple at Pontiac wer 
Walled Lake MA 4-451) 
‘53 FORD—REALLY NICE CAR. 
T-Huron — 923 W. Huron. FE   
  
  ‘53 FORD RANCH WGN. NEW 
rings, shocks goed tires. Very 
clean. UL S i017 
SPENCE   
NEW 
RAMBLER 
Trade-Ins 
"58 Chevrolet ......$1577 BISCAYNE mi 
57 Buick .........$1694 
CONVERTIBLE 
538 Metropolitan ...$1397 HARDTOP 
55 Chrysler .......$1294 
IMPERIAL E:ARDTOP 
58 Metropolitan ...$1284 CONVERTIBLE 
56 Mercury .......$1195 
          "53 FORD Custom 2 door $504 
"85 CHEVY Delray 2 door $804 | 
97 PLYMOUTH Bel. 2 dr. $104 
88 FORD Custom “300” $1594. 
38 CHEVY B-Alr 4 Door $1894 
'57 PLYMOUTH Savoy 4 dr. $1004 
| '58 CHEVY Deiray 2 door . $1504 
59 PLYMOUTH Savoy 4 dr. $1804 
56 OLDS Holiday Super ‘88° $1394 
57 CHEVY 2 Door Sedan .. $1094 
57 BUICK Special 2 Door $1594 
17 FORD Conveftible $1694 
‘a5 CADILLAC Convertible $1894 | 
55 PONTIAC 4 Door $704 
53 OLDS 4 Door ‘'R8" $404 | 
$3 BUICK Station Wagon ... $594 
"56 BUICK Special H-Top $904 
‘38 FORD F-Lane 4 Door .. $1604 
  57 PLYMOUTH 2 Door H-Top $149% 
Ss RAMBLER 4’ Door Wag. $804 
‘53. PONTIAC 2 Door $344 
50 PONTIAC $49 
‘33 CHEVY $244), 
48 PONTIAC 0 > 
‘64 PONTIAC $294 
GLENN'S | MOTOR SALES | 
952 WEST BO | (ths NEW 
VALUE” USED. gars | 
4.737) FE 4-1797 |, FOR 
ii STATION WAGON—9 Pasienger. 
56 Mercury .......$1144 HARDTOP—Sharp! 
"56 Nash ........ ..$ 896 For Sale | Used Cars 110 eee ! 
"38 FOR 500 CONVERTIBLE 
“38 C 4g ton pickup Oe 
pickup 
HOUEH TER & SON YOUR FRIENDLY OLDS DEALER 
FOR N R_ SALES 
OL_1-9761   
  1956 Soc H-TOP. SUPER . $1495 
1953 Pontiac ................. $ 225 
1054 Ford Country Sedan .... $ 69 
1052 Chevy 22225 sen cee $ 150 
Oldsmobile | ceae Ueeae eee en 
SMITH MOTOR Si ALES 1501_Baldwin Ave. . 
1955 FORD RANCHWAGON. NO 
“money down. Small monthly pay- 
ments. Lucky Auto Sales. 193 S. 
4-1006.   _For Sale Used Cars 110) 1 ‘'s) LLOYD. GETS OVER 40 
miles per galion. Anyone can af- 
ford it. Onl 
Beer, month. 
666 CODWARD, MI 
  iy MERCORY. ~ eh AUTO. 
  ‘35 style 2 = $525 . GARNERS USED CARS 
aioe 
$270. OA 8-: 
1054 F ggeury Lge NEW $500. PE 4-4347, ‘etter 5 : 
1956 4-DR. ‘OLDS. | wiecror! . POW- er transmission. Electric seats, 
windows, power steering’ com- 
pletely overhauled. No rust. Exc. 
_cond., $1395.. MUtual 4-5921. 
1951 OLDS, $95. KING AUTO., 
_S. Saginaw. FE 8-0402 
‘54 ote 88 TARD 
aun West Montcalm , 118, 
TOP ; $395 
NERS USED CARS 
"33 OLDSMOBILE. SHARP! WILL make good deal. Call Ernice Fe- 
lice at Cy Owens, FE 5-4101 or 
OR 3-067§00 FOR SALE OR TRADE ‘52 OLDS, 
98. 116 Adelaide. 
1954 PLYMOUTH 
REPOSSESSION $295 full price, no cash needed. 
$17 month. Mr. Bell, King Auto. 
—FE 68-0402, 00 1955 PLYMOUTH SAVOY, 4 DOOR: 
se 8, automatic trans. .. &&H. Nice, 
Clarkston Motor Sales CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH- Serer 
Main St. Clarkston 5-514l 
~~ '§3 PLYMOUTH | RETOR 
REPOSSESSION ee full price, no cash needed. 
$11.46 per month. Mr. Bell, King 
Auto. FE 8-0402. 
1955 PLYMOUTH, 4 DOOR, } NICE 
cas. No money down. $27.24 
month. Lucky Auto Sales. 193 8. 
_ Saginaw. FE 4-1006, 
"55 PLYMOUTH PLAZA - DR 
RADIO & HEATER. ABSOLUTE: 
LY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume 
payments of oe mo. Call 
Credit Mer. rks at MI 
00. Harold Turner Ford. 
52 PLYMOUTH EXC. TRANSPOR-   
  
  
tation On “é $145 total price. 
"56 = ot unt? Sedan Station 
oe trdns. Any old 
an sae ais on halance. 
TOM TOM_ BOHR, INC.~ MU . 4-1715 
.054 PLYMOUTH SEDAN, V VERY 
  
  For Sale Used Care 110 
HASKINS AUGUST 
| CLEARANCE 1954 Chevrolet 4 door sedan, Radio, 
eater. Above average a 
n 
1955 Chevrolet 210 2 door seen 
Beautiful 2-tone green fin ish, 
dio, heater, one owner, ...- 
1956 Chevrolet 210 4 door sedan. 
Radio. heater, beautiful 2-tone 
blue finish. Like new .... $1145 
1957 Chevrolet 218 4 door sedan. V-8 
engine. Powerglide, radio, heater, 
like new 2-tone blue finish ..$1395 
1958 Chevrolet sepapechioh 4 door se- 
dan. V-8 engine, radio, heater, 
beautiful sais and gold $1695 
1953 Pontiac Convertible. Hydra- 
matic. Radio, heater, like new 
throughout. Solid black $695 
1957 Ford tudor sedan. Radia, heat- 
pie beautiful solid white sts: 
Pet Gonndanones acdccoonuocce 
1957 Oldsmobile Holiday a re 
dramatic. Power steering, ht 
brakes, radio, heater. solid “i 
blue finish. One owner ... 
1953 Moreen spore roadster, solid 
whi 1 aa 
Throughout” ees 
Haskins Chev. 6571 Dixie Highway at M15 
MAple 5-5071 Open nites ‘til 9 
FACTORY BRANCH 
55 PONTIAC S-CHIEF CATALINA. COUPE 
Radio & Heater, Hydrama- 
... $1095   
. 
Pontiac ' 
nice car. FE 2.7542. H. Riggins. R t l 
i951 PLYMOUTH 4 DR. GOOD S al cond. EM 43-5234. 
55 arp LY MOUTH, ‘BELVEDERE St 
GARNERS USED CARS ore 222 W Montcalm 
"57 PLYMOUTH SAVOY 4 DR. SE- 
dan. Automatic Radio & Heater. 
V-8. The perfect family car. Sale 
$1195, $195 down. ae -   
  
NORTH ~ CHEVROLET CO. Has the 
INTERNATIONAL 
1-YEAR 
Discount ~- 
WARRANTY GIVEN FREE 
WITH EVERY CAR 
Coverage; No Exclusions 
58 Ford V-8, 500, Fordo. ... $1697 
"538 Chev. 4dr. V-8, auto. ... $1598 
‘54 Ford 2-dr. V-6 engine ... $ 493 
‘55 Ford ®@ pass. wagon, V-8 $ 937 
‘57 Pontiac HT. V-8, hydra, $1432 
‘56 Pontiac HT. Power eqpt. $1092 
'55 Chev. 2-door, wielserecee OTT 
‘58 Chev. 4-door Wagon .... 
79 More to Pick From 
BANK RATES eee 
$1853 | | Saginaw. F month. BIRMINGHAM 
63 FORD $125 BLER, 666 S. WOODWARD, AMT FE 5-8643 6-3900 
1951 PLYMOUTH. 895._KING 
115 8. Saginaw. FE 8-0402. _ Auto:, Ho & af "E 
1952 2 PONTIAC. $95 KING AUTO. 
115 8. S. Saginaw. FE 8-0402, 
CLEAN °53 PONTIAC 2-DR. $250. 
FE 8-6682.   36 PONTIAC 4 DR. HYDRA. EXC. 
cond. Will accept older car in 
trade. OR 3-4592 
‘$3. PONTIAC Caer arn SE- 
DAN. RADIO HEATER  AB- 
SOLUTELY xo" MONEY DOWN. 
Assume payments of $5.83 per 
mo. Call Credit Mgr. Mr, Parks | 
at MI 4-7500. Harold Turner 
Ford. 
1951 ~ PONTIAC. $95. 5 KING Al AvTo., 
115 8. Saginaw. FE 
% io GOOD CONDE CR 
Paul Bunyan | 
Days 
at Union Lake 
Aug. 3th & 6th   
  
Be sure to see our display 
A 1902 RAMBLER 
R & C Rambler Sales 
  Open 8:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. 
North Chev.   Hunter Bivd. at 8. Woodward Ave. 
BIRMINGHAM MI 4-2735 
1953 FORD, 2 DOOR 
REPOSSESSION   ad 
urs FE 8-040 
855 FORD PRREANE V-8, $3 $5 
down. No credit problems at Ed- 
die Bteele, Ford, ad Orchard 
__Lake Road, FE 2-25 
STOP! LOOK! SAVE ! 
1959 PONTIAC   
  
.. SAVE $$ 
steering, radio, 
heater, 
tires, 
accessories, 
“Has been used 
early and save. 
1958 PONTIAC . $2405 
Station Wagon, Starchief Custom 
Safarie, Power brakes, Hydra- 
matic, radio, heater, white walls, 
2-tone blue. Hurry! Hurry! 
1955 BUICK ... weve e $1045 
Super 4-door sedan, power steer- 
ing, power brakes, Dynaflow, ra- 
dio, heater, white wali tires. Low 
mileage and just like new. 
1954 BUICK $805 
Super 4 door sedan. Power steer- 
ing and won brakes, Radio, 
heater, ite wall tires. Solid 
white beauty. 
1957 CHEVROLET $1795 
Station wagon with V-8 engine, power brakes, 
Hydramatic, whitew ali 
back-up lights and other 
2,250 actual miles. 
as demo. Shop 
Powerglide, radio, heater, white 
wall tires- Low miles, lavender 
and ivory. 
1958 CHEVROLET $2295 
4-door wagon, V-8 Sng ine. Power- 
lide, radio, heater, whitewalls. 
‘ar is like new. 
1956 FORD : $1305 
Country sedan wagon. V- 8 engine, 
Fordomatic, radio, heater, white- 
wall tires. Beautiful green and| 
ivory. 
1957 CHEVROLET $1745 
Bel Air 2-door hardtop, V.8 en- gine, 1 owner, low mileage. A 
psc beauty. Powerglide, radio, 
eater. 
1958 RAMBLER .. $1395 
Super, radio, heater, one owner. | 
A real gas saver. Whitewall tires. 
1956 BUICK -s..+.. $1506 
Century convertible, ‘full power. 
An ideal car for this ideal weath- 
er. 
1957 BUICK .. $1705 
Super hardtop. with | power steer- 
ing, power brakes, radio, heater 
  STATESMAN 4 DOOR | 
36 ‘Rambler” 
STATION WAGON-—Sharp! i 
weve O45 | 55 “Rambler” 
  DELUXE 2 DOOR 
55 Studebaker .....$ 797 
CLUB COUPE 
55 Nash ..........8 7/0 > AMBASSADOR 4 DOOR 
55 Plymouth ......$ 694 BELVEDERE HARDTOP - 
‘54 Ford ..........$ 597 CONVERTIBLE 
Plymouth ......$ 597 
SAVOY 2 DOOR 
54 Ford ..........$ 545 CUSTOM 4 DOOR 
’°S4 Ford ....2...-.$ 497 CUSTOM 8 
53 Chevrolet ......$ 395 BEL AIR HARDTOP 
54 Pontiac ........$ 344 
DELUXE 4DOOR 
§3 Dodges <..0006.9 WS 4 DOOR | 
‘53 Pontiac ....... _$ 197 | 
3, DOOR 2 & 4 
< "NC 
+Sales & Service— 211 8. SAGINAW ST. PB 8-454); $1185 | 1956 BUICK and ful] accessories. 
. $1385 
Special hardtop. Dynaflow, radio, 
heater, whitewall tires. Low miles 
and sharp. 
  - $195 full price. No cash needed. | 
$11.46 per arm Mr, Bell, King 
Starchief 4-ddor sedan, power, 
    1955 BUICK .. ‘ ., $1145 
Special convertible, new tires, 
‘Tew top one owner. ri 
1956 FORD. $1495. 
Country Squire wagon, 9 passen- 
es power steering, power brakes | 
8, Fordomatic, | 
1957 BUICK $1905 
Roadmaster ‘75° ¢door hardtop, 
has everything. Buy this one and 
go first class. 
1958 FOR . $2195 
Fairlane P00 hardtop. ‘power steer- 
ing and brakes. Interceptor en- 
gine with nothing but power ra- 
dio, heater, whitewalls. Solid 
black finish. 
1067 ISETIA 3... o.6:25--40-0 2 $495 
The real economy car, just fill 
the gas tank and forget it. Real 
nice all the way. 
SHELTON Pontiac-Buick on — ae car sales 
. or later 
ROCH ESTER’ OL 1-8311   
FORD DEALER 
A-1 . Used Car Shopping Cented 
57 FORD 
‘Cy’ Owens Your yyeatis FORD Dealer 
147 SAGINAW 
Fe $-4101 re   1 8145 Commerce Road EM 3-4155, 
We have 75 new Ramblers to sell 
in the next 435 days. 
OUR DEALS RE THE WAY 
: ___ You LIKE THEM! FE 3-7117 45 MT. CLEMSNS ST. 
  
Transportation 
“Plus” 
  ‘53 Nash SOdan sige cen $295 
‘34 Nash station Wego $295 
"34 Nash 2 door $295 
"53 Chevy 2 upor . $395 
"3. Chevy Bel a Hardtop .. $495 
49 Chevy Seda $45 
"51 Plymouth Sedan zs $145 
'53°Chevy Sedan; $295 
"52 Ford Hardtop $355 
‘53 Ford 2 door . $305 
53 Ford 2 door . $295 
‘34 Ford Sedan $495 
| "54 De Soto ; $495 
[33 Dodge Station Wagon .... $395 
‘54 Dodge Club Coupe $445 
‘32 Pontiac 2 door $ 75 
"51 Pontiac ‘Sedan $75 
"33 Pontiac Sedan we oo. $34 
‘33 Plymouth Club Coupe .... $295 
$145 ‘32 Plymouth Club Coupe ... 
‘33 Buick 2 . $245 
We arrange our own financin 
$5 DOWN WILL HANDLE ANY 
THESE CARS. 
SALES PRICED 
ONLY’ 
BIRMINGHAM. 
RAMBLER 666 S. WOODWARD 
MI 6- SHO - door 
    
oN 2 
CARS 
“THERE MUS? 
ONLY 7 
‘09 Chevy FACTORY 
OFFICIALS’ CARS 
LEFF 
58 CH EVROLET 
IMPALA 2 DOOR 
Powerglide- Pow 
Steering, Ser Brakes, Radio & Heater, White- 
walls. Silver Blue Paint. 
WAS $2345 
cvaueens do NOW $2195 
98 FORD 
.. Standard Trans, 
& Heater. White. 
_ NOW $1595 
'57 CHEVROLET BEL AIR_HARDTOP 
2 Door—V #8, Powerglide. 
Radio & Heater, White- 
Turguoise and walls. 
13. original Ivory. 
miles. 
WAS $1895 
hives ses NOW $1845 
*57 CHEVROLET 
SPORT _COUPE 
Deo: / 2 210—Radio and Heater; Bb he w/ 
Walls. Coral, Ivory; 
WAS $1695 . 
bo CRESS. 2 NOW $1595 
57 CHEVROLET 
STATION waGgor es Door 210 — Ratio 
‘Heater. Standard 
‘rane W-Walls, Dusk 
Pear] & Ivory. 
WAS $1745 
weeeeeeeee NOW $1675 
55 BUICK 
bl Ban 
—Radio & 
: Obowst steering 
Sranoe oe 
ie: Heat- 
& 
2- 
... NOW $1045 
  In Less Than 3 Months 
Heater. & Cyl., Power- 
* lide, W-Walls. Sierra 
~ old pain nt. 
WAS $1745 
ae ra i NOW $1675 
54 CHEVROLET 
BEL AIR 2 DOOR Radio & Heater, Power- 
fiide. Woodland Green. paint 
WAS $745 
MANY — MANY — MORE 
-MATTHE HARGREAVES "631 OAKLAND AVE. 
FE 4 33" 
SOLD 
BE A REASON” ° 
‘59 Chevy B/AIR 4 DOOR 
Fuel Injection 
TURBOGLIDE: RADIO AND HEATER, WHITEWALLS. NEW CAR GUARANTEE 
$2495 
‘58 CHEVROLET 
BISCAYNE 2 
v3, Radio 
cade es 
DOOR 
Standard 
& Heater. 
Blue paint. trans, 
Cas- Ww- 
FORD 
EeIREANS oP ped 
4 Doo an — Power 
Steering, oT, Ford-O- 
Matic, Inoa Gold paint. 
WAS $1795 
wee NOW $1695 
57 CHEVROLET 
BEL Ar one 
O'’Drive, Radio 
a “Bi phi e. cade Blue. lite 
WAS $189 Bike oe 
ans en Cfo INOW $1795 
’57 FORD 
COUNTRY SEDAN 
Station Wagon 4 Door— 
Heater, Signals, Wash- 
ers, W-Walls. ,Solid Black 
WAS $1705 
vo. os. NOW $1695 
57 CHEVROLET erariee Pholeeae 
Door 210 Sard Radio & t eee eee e 
ss ans sens NOW $645 
  
      
4547 __ BEHIND THE POST OFICE . For Sale Used Cars 110 
1948 rosrisc 
OR _3-3310 
‘$4 PONTIAC 8 4 DR. R&H. FE 
86-9513. Manning. 
~WILSON PON TIAC-CADILLAC 
CLEAN. Birmingham Trades 
1350 N. 
Woodward: 
Birmingham MI 4-1930| > 
51 PONTIAC GOOD RUNNING 
condition. $75. FE 4-9319. 363 Au- 
burn Ave. . 
  
  | 1954 PONTIAC: 2 DR. CHIEFTAIN. 
Can be seen at Gulf Station. 
Cor. Auburn & Perry. Pontiac.   
"58 DeSOTO F-Flite 4 door $2295 
20,000 miles. Power steering, Pow- 
er brakes 
‘57 DeSOTO F-Dome 4 dr. ... $1795 
Power steering, Radio, Very clean 
37 DeSOTO F Sweep 2 dr. ... $1595 
Powerflite trans. 
56 DeSOTO F-Flite 4 dr. . $1395 Power steering, radio. One owner. 
‘55 DeSOTO H-Top 2 door . 5 
One owner — Very clean. 
“54 DeSOTO E Pome 4 Door pees 
53 DeSOTO 4 Door 6 ... $29. 
BRAID “MOTOR SALES 
DeSOTO-PI.YMOUTH DEALER 35 YEARS FAIR DEALING CASS AT W, PIKE STS. 
ARE REVOU TIR ED. 
OF WALKING?? “54 Ford Custom 8 2 dr. $495 
‘54 Chev. 210 4 dr. PG. $395 
‘53 Ford 2 dr. 8 FOM $325 
48 Willys Sta. Wagon. O.D. $145 
"50 Ford Club Coupe _........ $ 85 
"52 Nash Hard Top. O.D. $ 
OGER'S SALES & SERVICE 
695 Auburn FE 2-9555 
USED JEEPS “our SPECIALTY 
SHARP CARS ALWAYS 
A . a 
R & R MOTORS Chrvsler-Plymouth-Imperial 
FE 4-3528 7 nent Pontiac 
J OHNSON . LAKE ORION ‘55 Ford Wen. 4 dr. beauty. 
'56 Pont. Wgn. 9 pass. Sharp 
‘55 Pont. 8C. 4 dr. Sed. Like new. 
"63 Pont. Convert. A-l 
"56 Mercury Convert. Full pee 
‘55 Buick HT. Priced to sell 
"87 Bonneville Convert. 
Bargain 
$5 Transportation Specials 
ae at 0   
RUSS JOHNSON LAKE ORION   MOTOR ns 
MY _2-2871 MY 
can be seen after 
-3447._ 
1955 5 PONTIAC STARCHIEF, 4 4 DR. 
also have a nice Starchief Cata- | 
lina Coupe. $795 full price ete 
very low monthly pym'ts, Lu 
Auto Sales. 193 8. Saginaw. FE 
4-1006 3 1461, 
5 1954 PONTIAC ARCHIE 4 DR’ For Sale Used Cars 110 
WILL, TRADE CLEAN. Sol ‘PON. jas take over ‘your’ 
ments op any late’ model. a 
6-4) 
RER OS SESSION 5 full price. No cash needed. 
a oe Mr. Bell. King Aute. 
OLIV ~Motor Sales 
‘50 BUICK ....... $2645   
  
  
      
LeSABRE . 
58 VOLKSWGN. $1895 MICROBUS . 
58 CHEVROLET $1995 L AIR 58 "FORD eee . $2095 STATION WA 
57 Bue CK sivas oP hOD 
57 STEEP FC 170 ..$1995 
56 VOLKSWGN. ..$1095 
50 PLYMOUTH ..$ 895 
56 BUICK .......,$1095 SEDAN "56 BUICK, oxsaneu$lI95 SUPER 55 PONTIAC .....$ 895 STARCHIEP 
55 BUICK ........§ 995 > caNTORY 55 pevicks 12 Fave ae £29 
55, BUICK capnswasd OD SUPER 
55 PONTIAC .....$ 695 CLUB COUPE 
55 BUICK eee B 795 
‘46 STEEP & PLOW ¢ 345 
SEE _ 
HANK OR GLENN 
OR A HA S BARGAIN BARONS 
A HAT-FULL OF $AVINGS 
OLIVER Motor Sales 
210 Oxchard Lake Ave. 
FE 2-9101 Open Eves. 
  
83 PONTIAC, 4 DOOR 
REPOSSESSION $195 full price. No cash needed. 
$11.46 per month. Mr. Bell, King 
> Auto ~0402. 
"52 . RAMBLER t STATION WAGON. 
OVERDRIVE. ADIO & HEAT- 
ER BSOLUTELY NO MONEY 
DOWN. Assume payments of 
$5.83 per mo. Call Credit Mer. 
Mr. Parks at MI 4-1500. Harold 
Turner Ford. 
'57 RAMBLER “SEDAN. 25 - 35 MILES 
per gallon. $150 down. $39.64 per 
month. BIRMINGHAM RAM- 
BLER, 666 S. WOODWARD, MI 
6-3900. 
36 RAMBLER STATIO: N, WAGO 
$1095 full price. BIR INGRAM 
Rambler, 666 S. Woodward, MI 
6-3900. - 
i951 STUDEBAKER. $95. KING 
| Auto., 115 8. Saginaw. FE 8-0402. 
| 1952 WILLY'S. GOOD CONDITION. | $235. 70 Illinois. FE 446     
  
  
  
  
    ‘56 Dodge 2 DOOR 
Auto. Trans. Radio & Heater. 
W Wallis. Ready to go. 
ONLY $995 
‘55 Plymouth BELVEDERE 4 DOOR 
Radio & Heater. Priced to go. 
ONLY $595 
‘55 Ford = CUSTOM 4 DOOR 
Radio and Heater. Overdrive, 
Wy Walls Like new 
ONLY $895 
‘59 Chrysler WINDSOR HARDTOP 
Power Steering, Power perce 
Radio and Heater, W/Walls 
ONLY $995 
‘SS Plymouth BELVEDERE HARDTOP 
Auto. Trans.,. Power Steering & 
Power rakes: Radio &.Heater, 
alls 
ONLY $895 
'55 Plymouth’ 2 DOOR 8 
~ ONLY $495 
5 DeSoto FIREDOME HARDTOP t 
Auto. Trans.. Power Steering. 
Power B Akos. Sharp. 
ONLY $995 
NO: MONEY 
DOWN 
24 MONTHS 
ON BALANCE 
ON ABOVE CARS 
— NO MILEAGE 
Bank Rates Up to 3 
New Car 
912 S. WOODWARD 
  BIRMINGHAM 
New Car 
TRADE-INS 
1 YEAR WARRANTY — NATIONAL BONDED CARS 
~SHARP BIRMINGHAM- 
SCHUTZ DE SOTQ- PLYMOUTH DEALER 
BIRMINGHAM '56 Ford CONVERTIBLE 8 
Straight Stick, Radio & Heater, 
W, Walls Black & Beautiful. 
a wey. 
— OR OLD CAR DOWN — 
‘58 Pontiac STARCHIEF CONVERTIBLE 
Power Steering, Power Brakes, 
Power Windows. Like new. 
a 
— OR OLD CAR DG@N — 
‘58 Chevrolet BISCAYNE 2 DOOR 8 
“Sharp” 
ONLY $1595 — $99 OR OLD CAR DOWN — 
‘56 Rambler STATION WAGON 
Custom — Auto. rene Radio 
and FONL ars 
Y $1295 — $99 ON ae CAR DOWN — 
'57 Olds STATION WAGON 
Fiesta 4 Door — Hydramatic, 
Power Steering, Power Brakes, 
Radio & Heater, W/Walls. Like 
"" ONLY $199 -- OR OLD CAR DOWN — 
'58 Chevrolet IMPALA COUPE 
Powerglide, Power Steering, 
Power Bretee peek & Heater, 
W, Walls 
Y¥ $199 -—- OR OE CAR DOWN — 
'57 Ford RETRACTABLE HARDTOP 
Fordomatic. ‘ower Steerin 
Power Brakes. Radio & enter: 
eee Beautiful Sun Gold 
ONLY $199 ~- OR OLD CAR DOWN — 
8 Plymouth TION WAGON 
custo Seba teee — 9 Passen- 
er. a betta Power Steer- 
er Bra Heater. W Walls es. Radio and 
ONLY $199 ~- OR OLD CAR DOWN — 
‘99 Volkswon. 
nese and aur swe actual 
~ ONLY $99 — OR OLD CAR DOWN — 
RESTRICTIONS — 
6 Months on Balance 
Trade-Ins 
MI 6-5302 
       % 4 | 
  THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, A i aie: i 
& 
' te * 
UGUST 8, 1959. ~ ~ z * a iets 
tore 
  
-- Today's Television Progra Programe furnished by stations Usted tm this column are subject te change witheet notice ms - + Will Consider   Channel =WJBE-TY Channel ¢—WWJ-TV Channel 1—WXYZ-TV Channel 9 CALW-TV Civil Rights Bill   
TONIGHT’S , HIGHLIGHTS | 
6:00 (2) Movie. 
7:30 
8:45 
8:30 
9: : 
9:30 & ' 
(4) All Star Baseball. Second 
All Star game. 
(7) Curtain Time, 
(9) Popeye. 
(2) News, Weather. 
(9) Farmer Alfalfa. 
(2) News Analyst. 
(2) News. 
(4) News. 
(7) News. 
(2) I Love Lucy. 
(7) People’s Choice. Comedy. 
Sock decides that marriage 
is wonderful institution for 
other people. 
(9) African Patrol. Adven- 
ture: Beautiful woman is 
key in baffling murder mys- 
tery that sends Derek deep 
into uncharted jungles. 
(2) Name Tune. Filmed 
highlights. 
(7) Youth Bureau. 
(9) Million Dollar Movi e| 
Young boy andj trainer-jn-| 
crime hold up pawnbroker 
with gun borrowed for pat- 
rolman in ‘You Can’t Get 
Away With Murder.”’ ('39.) 
(2) The Texan. Western: 
Wayward son of small town 
sheriff robs and kills woman | 
rancher, old friend of Bill 
Longley’s. Repeat. 
(7) Polka-Go-Round. Music 
with guests the young Swiss 
Club Dancers of Chicago; 
Rosemary Bailey, 10-year- 
old ‘“wunderkind” organist 
from Westchester, Il].; and 
Janet and Francis Marut, 
“Polka Whiz Kids” from N.J. 
(4) All Star Wrap-up. 
(2) Father Knows Best. 
Comedy: Enchanted by 
idyllic relationship between. 
poet William Wordsworth 
and his sister, Betty is de- 
termined to establish warm 
rapport with Bud and Kathy 
who look with jaundiced eye 
upon her overtures of sis- 
terly love. Repeat. 
(4) Tales of Wells Fargo. 
(7) Bold Journey. True ad- 
venture: 10,000 mile tour of 10: 00 Joan Crawford stars-as un- 
faithful wife w youthful 
lover kills her hukband in 
“Strange Witness.” : 
(4) Theater. Drama: Based- 
“on-fact drama‘of courage in 
peacetime aviation will be 
presented in “Obenauf 
Story.” 
(1) Top Pro Golf. Julius 
Boros vs. Sam Sneed at Sea 
Island Golf Club. 
(9) Boston Blackie. 
(2) Playhouse, Drama: Lee 
J. Cobb stars in ‘Trial at Devil’s Canyon.’ Set in re- 
mote Arizona Territory com- 
munity shortly after Civil 
War, the drama centers 
about unorthodox actions of 
sheriff who arouses hostility 12:45 (2) Guiding Light. 
12:50 (9) News. - 
1:% (2) Our Miss Brooks. 
~ (4) It’s a’ Great Life. 
(7) Music Bingy. 
(9) Movie. 
(4) I Married Joan. 
(1) Topper. ‘ 
(4) Faye Elizabet 
(4) Queen for a Day. 
(7) Day in Court. 
(2) House 
(4) Court of Human Rela- 
tions. 
(7) Gale Storm. . 
(2) Big Payoff. ~ 
(4) Young Dr. Malone. 
(7) Beat the Clock. 
(9) Movie. (2) As The World Turns, 
(2) For Better or Worse. 
of young Army Officer. :30 (4) From these Roots. 
(4) Playhouse. Drama: Sen- a ) bs = Zou Trust? 
sitive lady in delicate health], 4 (2) Verdict Is Yours. falls in love with lively, ag-| #88 (2) Brighter Day. 
. gressive ghost. Michael “t (Color) Truth or Conse 
No Wilding. (7) Bandstand. 10:15 (9) Weather 4:15 (2).Secret Storm. 
: . 4:30 (2) Edge of Night. 
10:20 (9) Sports Show. Milt Hop- (4) County Fair. 
wood, (9) Sherwood Forest. 
10:30 (7) Det. Deadline. Lou Gor-|5:00 (2) Movie. 
don and guests. (4) (Color) George Pierrot. 
(9) Starlight Theater. (9) Looney Tunes. 
Drama: Geor ge Sanders, 5:30 (7) Adventure Time. 
“Picture of Dorian Gray.” |5:58 (4) Sports. \ 
(45.) ‘ 
10:50 (4) News. 
11:00 (2) News. A Palace Guard 
(4) News. \Ky 
(7) Soupy's On. : Kicks Woman 
11:10 (2) Weather. 
11:15 (2) Sports. 
(4) Weather. 
11:20 (2) Nightwatch Theater. 
Melodrama: 
field, ‘‘Nightmare.” 
(4) Sports. 36.)     
in Line of Duty 
| LONDON  — A scarlet-coated, DETROIT « — Families of the 
Jayne Mans- Buckingham Palace guard — nor- Gr 
/mally the last word in British mil-| 
itary propriety—was confined to 
11:30 (4) Jack Parr. Hugh Downs parracks today. 
takes over as emcee for to- 
night only. 
(7) Night Court. 
TUESDAY MOURNING 
5:50 (2) Meditations 
6:55 (2) On The Farm Front. 
7:0@ (2) TV Co'lege. 
(4) Today. 
(7) Big Show. 
  Mexico with 450 people in 
caravan of 200 trailers with 
Wally Byam narrating. 
(2) Frontier Justice. Drama: | 
Dewey Martin stars as Doc 
Holliday in “Man of Fear.” 
Visiting his, friends, the 
Brands. Holliday finds that 
love has turned to loathing 
in household because Lee 
Brand is paying protection 
money to save ranch. | 
(4) Peter Gunn,, Adventure: 
When waterfront character 
called ‘Frog’ is murdered 
by man frantic to recover 
little black book, next prob- 
able victim is old woman. 
Craig Stevens stars as Peter 
Gunn. 
(1) Play of Week. Drama: 
Department store skiptracer 
with no guts suddenly finds 
himself murder suspect. 
(9) Steve Wilson. Drama: 
Wilson discovers vicious 
racket of company which 
charges large amounts for 7:38 (2) Cartoon Classroom 
(7) Breakfast “irre 
(7) Stage 3. 
10:00 (4) Dough-Re- Mi. 
10:25 (9) Billboard. 
10:30 (2) Sam Levenson. 
(4) Treasure Hunt. 
(9) Special Agent~ 
10:56 (7) News. 
/U1:00 (2) 1 Love “Lucy. 
(4) Price Is Right. 
(7) Lady of Charm. 
(9) Abbott and Costello. 
1:30 (2) Top Dollar. 
(4) Concentration. 
(9) Foreign Legionnaire. 
(11:45 (7) Detroit Today. 
TUESDAY AFTERNOON 
12:00 (2) Love of Life. 
. (4) Tic Tac Dough. ‘ 
(7) Across the Board. 
(9) World Passport 9:00 (2) Movie. 
44) Bozo the Clown (color) 
9:30 (4) Life of Riley. * * * 
A woman tourist complained he’ he Swit ke ede: 
kicked her while executing a smart ©, Proposal will be made at a, 
last night. 
elite Coldstream Guards. 
American. 
claim at the guards. 
* * * 
their tall, 
  . [man told it today: 
{2:30 (2) Search tor Tomorrow. 
(4) It Could Be You. 
  loans. 
(2) Joseph Cotten. Drama: (7) Pantomime Quiz 
(9) Serial Theater '   
1 Corn on —— 
arment 
  
40 Fo 
54 Fu 
58 Gr 
56 Deaths 
57 Morning x 
moisture 
D 
1 Arrive 
2 Bu 
38 4 
ye ; suggestively othold 
41 Accomplished 
42 Declaim 
45 Shared at 
traddles 
Tomato —— ACROSS     
  rT) EP en 
A   
  "4 T 
*¥   
        
  = 
    
    
    
i     
    
    
  
  
  
48     
1   
if   
      i   ll (suffix) 
af —— 3 TT T>                   
Ground 
Knowledge 
Drama part 
Pastry 
Fencing sword 
Espouses OWN 
rden 
te 2e@ —#—-S6e-1> 
  Examine 
accounts 23 Titles 
24 Be borne 
25 Blackbirds 
26 Irish peasant 
27 Amoeba foot 
28 Glacial ridges 
29 ae and 
Sigple 31 Jiggle 
33 Not suitable 38 Controvert 
40 Oklahoma 
41 Garment 
42 Poems 
43 Harvest   
6 Dry 
47 Prench river 
48 Was aware 
50 Ornament 44 Church recess The guard snapped to atten- 
tion and slammed his rifle butt 
on the ground—the signal that 
he was going to march off. The 
thought the guard may have 
woman was teasing him. 
x * * 
know.”’ 
iShow Goes On         
Defies Ailment 
ovation. 
x * * 
  
customers. 
loss of $4,000 more. 
x « 
    patrol outside the palace gates|with U. S. District Judge Charles’ 
Police declined to name the 
woman or the member of the 
One 
British paper, naming no names, 
said the woman tourist is an 
As always, tourists crammed the 
broad sidewalk in front of the 
palace last night to point and ex-/Rogers City for the Michigan 
As always, the guardsmen in, ‘ Slack bearshin hats|-on't See the Forest . . . 
‘looked straight ahead, never 
_changing expression as -tourists 
posed beside them for pictures. 
Then something went wrong with) 
tradition. As one off-duty guards-| 
“As he marched off on patrol 
jin front of the palace gates, he 
accidentally bumped into the wom- 
an. She got very annoyed, But the 
guard was a bit shocked too, you 
as Gary Crosby 
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)—Gary 
Crosby, battling a severe case of 
laryngitis, retured to the Crosby 
brothers’ act Sunday night at the 
Sahara Hotel and got a standing 
The eldest of Bing’s sons be-' 
came sick just before show time) 
‘Saturday night. He didn't go on,! 
tabs for some 600 disappointed: 
The second Saturday night show 
was canceled, and that meant a 
A doctor advised Gary to rest 
his tonsils till Tuesday at least. 
But the singer said he was going 
on anyhow, and got through his 
60-minute act without any trouble. | Senate Committee - to 
'| Take Up Measure Over 
Southern Objection 
WASHINGTON W — By an §-5 
vote,““the Senate Judiciary Com- 
mittee overrode southern opposi- 
tion today and took a civil rights 
bill up for consideration. 
Earlier a subcommittee of the) 
judiciary group lined up 2-1 in an| 
incomplete vote, in favor of shelv- 
ing a proposed _ constitutional 
amendment designed to annul the 
Supreme Court's desegregation de- 
cision, : 
The full committee overrode 
| objections from Chairman James 
O. Eastland (D-Miss) and other 
Southern opponents. They had 
blocked attempts at two previous 
meetings to get the legislation 
up for action. 4 
The bill called up, previously ap- 
proved by a 4-3 vote in subcommit- 
tee, is limited to extending the life 
of the Civil Rights Commission! 
and to require the preservation of 
voting records for use in investiga- 
tions by the attorney general into’ 
alleged denial of voting rights. | 
Senate Republican leader Ev- 
erett. M. Dirksen of Illinois told 
newsmen after the meeting that     AP Wirephote 
SECOND IN COMMAND — Gen. George H. Decker raises his 
hand to take the oath of office as the Army's new chief of staff. 
Standing beside him is Gen. Lyman Lemnitzer who was recently 
moved up from this post to become chief of staff. - 
  
he believes it now will be possibie 
to get a civil rights bill out of the ‘committee.   TV News and Reviews   
  
Bradley Families PGA Tourney Provides 
Want $4,750,000 . Weekend's Top Drama 
| By WILLIAM EWALD 
3 men lost in the sinking of the! 
eat Lakes freighter Carl D 
|Bradley will propose that U. S. 
Steel Corp. pay them damages of 
/$4,750,000, an attorney for the 
\group said today. 
Atty. Kenneth C. Davies 
* x * conference Thursday in Cleveland | 
J. McNamee. 
with representatives of the ship és 
owners and the families over dam- 
age claims at that time. 
The Bradley sank in a Lake 
Michigan storm last Nov. 18. Only 
two members of the crew survived. 
The Bradley was operated. by the = 
Bradley Transportation Co. of ¢ 
   ‘ium sublimity. 
  jLimestone Division of U. S. Steel. 
  
when Jerry Bar 
ber, a wee fel 
low 
  REGINA—Of the total area of 
|Saskatchewan province in Cana- 
ida, about one-third is given over 
to forests either under govern- 
mers or private control. years of competition, potted a % 
third round. 
The putt pitched Barber ahead o     CBS-TV devoted an hour on Sat- 
jurday and 90 minutes yesterday to 
Judge McNamee is to confer|Portions of the 72-hole competition . from Minneapo- 
lis and from this 
mass of play 
there issued two 
moments of me- 
The first took 
olace at the 
close of hos- 
tilities Saturday 
who had 
never won a major tourney in 20 
foot putt on the last hole of the 22 Killed in Accidents. —s a. £ ne ee ah bisa, 
‘ if : = be fi 4 
THIRTY-THRER = 
‘ 
  
the high for the year. 
highway mishaps, 
fell from a tractor. 
gan highways. 
and two trees. 
and struck a tree. 
x & * 
head-on collision. 
    | pital in Fli 
ithe whole field and when the TV Genesee County. 
* 
Yesterday. * 
the * 
drama NEW YORK (UPI) — My enthu- camera zoomed in on the little 
isiasm for televised golf is some-|California pro, the screen lit up “what less than that for stomach With a study in controlled ecstasy. 
acid commercials, but there’s little! 
doubt that the principal drama of; 
ithe weekend was manufactured by back upon itself. Barber goofed | 
said the pro golf'tournament on CBS-/on thé penultimate hole and then! 
J ifailed to dunk a 14-footer on the turned 
‘final hole that would have give 
him a tourney tie. 
This time, 
—body slumped, face slack 
smile. 
gantly raw. 
end. 
    \pilot   
Well, Atter All, Visitors 
| Must Show Patriotism 
By EARL WILSON 
PONCE, Puerto Rico—My becoming a rummy . 
rum-taster . . . was just patriotism, that's all it was. 
x & * 
say no. I said “Yippee!” 
My V.W..(Viewtiful Wife; it also stands 
for Vodka and Water) was fully as patri- 
otic as I was when we toured this pleasant 
land, which was discovered by Columbus 
in pee again by Ed Gardner, for in- 
come tax.purposes, in 1949. Puerto Rico 
usually produces 86 per cent of our rum 
.. . or “rawn,” as they eallit .. . though 
| the figures may be down a little this year 
due to our tasting tour. 
To our surprise, after we flew here to meet’          WILSON 
jand Sahara owner Milton Prell the 50 or 60 members of the wealthy Serralles family that 
picked up $7,000 worth of dinner;makes Dofi Q, we saw a vodka sign. 
* * x 
cane. We call it Serranoff, based on the family name. 
Smirnoff people in Connecticut object. 
Naturally, we had to be patriotic about the vodka too. 
The rum, light, dry and 80-proof (the present trend) and 
low in calories, is being promoted as a romantic “lovers’ 
drink.” 
  
- - Today’s Radio Programs - 5 x *& * 
  silences,”. he said. 
  Wie, (900) UBLW, (sue) WwW, (6a) WOAK, (ils®) Wa?e, (1978) WPUN, 11400)  WIRK, (1800) 
tONIGH? 11:00—WJR, News, Sports WWJ, News, F. Elizabeth , 
emutsn. eee WWJ, Network Time WXYZ, Breakfast Club #:00—WJR, Showcase 
oRiw, wer WHY2 News, Surreil CKLW News, David WW News, Maswell Ww ' News ; KLW. Ko WJBK, News, Reid CKLW News, Davies 
WJBK. News. Don Met.eod ween etal WCAR, News. Martyn WJBK. Reid 
WCAR News Bennett WPON fark 
whom) Hews Suerte waek Serre 2:30—WKY2, Paul winte Han WIR | Mute "oie de ke OKLW ane yp orate ‘ ii . an Pinner oate CKLW. Knowles CKLW Mary Morgan 
Wa axwell a 00 - F WXYZ News = was ween are an 3:00—WJR, Composite 
CKLW, News | TUESDAY MORNING Whim peter & Ware ww News, Maxwell 
WUAR Pages CK! Joe Van WXYS M 6horr t re v 1 W' ON Candieliaht ay hee once meres WIBK News Reta CELW sen ¥en 
1:00-—-WJR, Guest House WXYS red Wolt 10:30--CKLW Myrtie Lappitt | WIBK MeLeoa 
ea pad A cae Soe iseneae WXYZ. Arennd Town WCAR News, Bennett 
W) iK, dack poner w an — ty jan ; wae sai WPON Bob Lark A. tiv al; wear rie 
wen Sandieliane wwa News, Theater 3:30-wsh Composite 
om) wh Muse Hal) CKLW Joe Van CKLW Bud Davies 
1:90—WWs § star Bxtte CKLW, Eye Opener ely Hews, gle WXYZ Night Train WJBK, News George WCAR, News. Martyn WWJ. News. Haggart 
CaLt J oe Tt WCAR News _WPON Chock Lewis 
8:00—WJR, Compos! 71:00< Wsk, News, Music 11:30 WJR, fime tor Muste| 4:00—Ww Music Hal) Ww, Bet, Your 6. vue News, ene . CKLW, Mary Morgan ww, ml veel 
#:20-WWs. Monitor, th ceaa teen Canis — WXYA m@ Shorr 
WBE . Bellboy WIBK, News. ne WJBE News. McLeod CKLW nowles Woae News TUBSDAT AFTERNOUN WCAR, News WOAR Weettins News Casey mekWan ten ben WPON Carriage e 
nmyestactonearet [ER Mee lett | we oon nse tn ; . hows an vi 
0-925 eee CKLW Sports Navie WXYZ. Paul Winter ,| SEER vevien ad Sows WIRK Newe  seoree WCAR. F od vurse : wees ingsley Stereo — . Mews 
#186 WIK, Report | aioe wan News. & udtet | WPON Rowe Levis WW" News, Frened WPI Nite seonndte i 4 shad | 
today CRLW News David 12:30 Win lime Out Muste| CKLW Sports, Davies CRLM World tod WIBK News. George CKLW Myrtle Labbitt. ,| WJBK ews. McLeod w Newa Canet wan WCAR News. Tenn Ernie 
hy my . woase Muste Hal i 7M rene 6: ws poate A 
  aga e epee. tind. wan 
. oy 4 > p:00— wane Mews.     \ help the many 
make it even better. 
Puerto Ricans love 
drink rum instead of* scotch 
- He agreed that as a compro- 
business hours. 
drink during business hours. 
xk & 
For those who care about 
such things, Ed Gardner's 
. tax deal in Puerto Rico 
(long ago abandoned) won't he repeated, the Governor 
has told friends. He said he signed his approval without 
studying it much. because “somebody told me Ed had to 
make a plane. 2   MUNOZ-MARIN 
\ 
plane.” : 
TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Bert Lahr is such a fisherman he 
was wearing was a towel and he got a 10-pound bass. . . 
That's earl, brother. 
  (Copyright, 1959) 
j / .. Imeana, 
“Oh, sure we make vodka,” an executive -aid, “from sugar 
“I come here to listen to the 
The Puerto Ricans are so 
serious about rum (due to the'cises with the U.S. Navy. 
taxes) that they have a “pilot: 
plant” where chemists try to three of her crew appeared at the | 
distilleries New England Medical Centtr and' 
Gov. I 
Munoz-Marin but wish he’d 
mise he’d drink rum during 
The trouble is, he doesn’t 
5 dreamed he was out in a boat with Brigitte Bardot and all she’ The center will VII firm. 
hero of 
habits—he moderately 
  | waves. 
turned down the lead in 
mitments. 
pitched at Martha Hyer. 
  spec slotted for Oct. 27 the TV camera 
caught Barber in a different pose 
and 
awash with dolor before he re- 
covered and unleashed a forced 
It was the sort of thing TV does 
best—drama caught on the wing, 
an event happening in the now, 
uncluttered, bare-boned, extrava- 
It put to shame all of the waxen, 
-|counterfeit retread filmed drivel 
that littered the channels all week. 
It was another one of those 
things about a wandering cowboy 
grotesque 
plays guitar for his 
horse, shoots villains by richochet- 
ing bullets off gravestones, kisses 
girls and skedaddles off—and is 
neither worse nor better than 
jdozens ofits kind jumbling the air- 
How would it look if I said no when this Commonwealth, zu CHANNEL SWIM: Mas- 
that so proudly flies the American flag asked me to become querade Party, which gets the ax 
an honorary rum-taster? What would Nixon say? Sol didn’t at NBC-TV on Sept. 24, may wind 
cose up in a Wednesday night spot this 
fallon ABC-TV .. . Jack Lemmon 
“What 
Makes Sammy Run,” the two-part 
NBC-TV special set for Sept. 27 
and Oct. 4, because of other com- 
The female lead in the 
« |Budd Schulberg drama is being 
Claudette Colbert and Robert 
Preston will star in ‘‘The Bells of 
St. Mary’s,”’ the 90-minute CBS-TV 
. Dick 
'Clark’s upcoming ABC-TV panel 
show. World of Talent. having 
signed on Jack E. Leonard as ita a aaa, 
ipermanent panelist. is now looking }* 
for a female plank sitter—the third! 
panelist on the show will be a 
The swing guest. 
British Seamen 
Donate Blood   
A colorful member of the Serralles clan, red-bearded Tito 
Wirsching, took us by launch over to Coffin Island, which , at Every Port 
very primitive, having only BOSTON (AP) — A practice 
one juke box and three bars. which wil] defy imitation by most 
|folk is being pursued by a group 
s of the 
crew of HMS Victorious, The big | 
aircraft carrier is en route home| 
today after taking part in =| ‘of British tars, member 
offered blood. 
ingham, 8. 
apore and Malta. 
Detroit Will Become   
  center in Detroit. 
offen 
and in industrial equipment. While she was tied up at Boston 
| They said they made such dona- 
tions at each. port they visited. In| 7am 
proofeof this, Richard J. McCol-|f “ 
lough, 35, of Newcastle, England, | 
displayed 14 donation cards; Har-' 
ry Barber, 24, of Sheffield, 10) 
‘and John Stephenson, 23, of Birm- 
Many distant ports were repre- 
sented, including Hong Kong, Sing- 
Tractor Service Center 
DETROIT: — Massey-Ferguson, 
one of the world’s largest pro- 
iducers of tractors and self-pro- 
“That experience decided me,” the Governor said, “never pelled combines, has set up its 
again to sign something for somebody who has to make a United States service headquar- 
|ters and a new service training 
  training 
\Programs for the compariy’s 3,500 
dealers in the United States and 
Canada in agricultural equipment | +, Y 
| The ( PU TAG 
| | 
  near his home. 
crashed into a tree. The 
the wreckage. 
near Covert. « 
x * * 
another construction worker. 
      Susan Bury, 10, 
    
water. 
  body’ yesterday afternoon. 
* * * 
Dewey Phelps, 62, 
swamped by a swell. 
  Drowning victims included: 
Roseville, 
drowned yesterday afternoon | 
when she fell into a canal off {U. S. Maps Incomplete Lake St. Clair in Chesterfield 
Township of Macomb County. 
Joseph Lechtanski, 18, Alpena, 
drowned yesterday in Grand Lake 
in Presque Isle County. Witnesses 
said he failed to resurface after 
diving from a boat into 20 feet of In addition to the 11 killed in 
six persons 
drowned, three were killed in a 
plane crash, a young girl drowned 
in a home accident and an Ohio 
boy was fatally injured when he 
The highest traffic toll for the 
year was posted jast in April 
when 17 persons died on Michi-: 
Two double-fatality crashes were 
recorded this weekend. Ermillo 
Soliz, 25, and Hoyt M. Earnest, 
28, both of Eagle Pass, Tex., were 
killed early yesterday when a bus 
in which they were riding veered 
off. a highway west ef Saginaw. 
The vehicle struck a utility pole 
A single-car crash on M131 in| 
Emmet County yesterday claimed 
the lives of Rudolph Fitol, 30, and 
his four-month-old daughter, Bar- 
bara’ of Harbor Springs. Police 
said Fitol’s car ran off the road 
Ralph Coleman, 46, Burr Oak, 
was killed yesterday near his St. | 
Joseph County home in a two-car 
Charles W. McCulley, 55, Detroit, 
died ave St. Joseph Hos-|comes back again tonight to try of injuries suffered 
\in a head-on collision on M15 -in 
Wayne Austen, 25, rural Reed 
City, was killed early Saturday | 
when his car went off U.S. 10 | 
vehicle 
Demetrjo Chavez, 56, Ypsilanti, 
was killed late Friday when his 
car struck a utility pole and over- 
turned. He was pinned beneath 
Earl H. Willis, rural William- 
ston, was fatally injured Friday 
night when his car was involved 
in a head-on crash on a closed 
section of M37 in Lake County. 
Willis’ vehicle struck the auto of 
Detroit, 
drowned in Lake St. Clair near 
Grosse Pointe Farms Saturday 
night when his motorboat was 
_ feet of water in Houghton Lake State Posts New Record 
of Deaths Over Weekend 
By United Press International 
Michigan posted a new record 
of 22 persons killed in all types of 
accidents during the weekend, but 
the traffic tol of 11 was was below im She was vacationing 
| there with her tamily, 
Two men and a young boy were 
fatally injured yesterday in a plane 
crash in Oakland County. The vic- 
tims were identified as Earl 
Trebsch, 29, St. Clair Shores, his 
four-year-old son Mark, and Rob- 
ert Sawders, 34, Warren. 
A home accident claimed the life 
of 10-month-old Diana Vine, Sault 
Ste, Marie. The infant drowned in 
a basin which was partially filled. 
with water on the porch of her , 
home, ,   * * * 
William Charles Altmaier, 8, 
Westerville, Ohio, died Saturday 
when he fell from a tractor on a 
farm on Little Lasalle Island in 
Mackinac County. Police said he 
became caught between the wheel 
and fender of the vehicle. 
Hope to Settle 
State Tax Issue GOP Senators Tonight 
Harold L. Edwards, 19, of Co-. 
vert Township in Van Buren Coun- 
ty, died Saturday when he was 
pinned beneath his overturned car Plan to Tie Up Loose 
Ends of Package 
_ LANSING W-The 1959 Legisla- 
ture, apparently destined to end 
its work on a low key of interest, 
once again to get it all over with. 
Their main fight concluded, the 
lawmakers needed chiefly to tie 
up loose ends of disagreement 
over adjustments to the business 
activities tax. 
It has been a foregone conclu- 
sion for at, least 10 days, since 
House Democrats surrendered 
wholesale on the income tax is- 
sue July 24, that the revenue 
answer will be built around a 
| use (sales) tax increase. 
Some observers contend Demo- 
crats were hopelessly beaten as 
long —ago as June 10 when the 
“piggy Back’’ income tax was de- 
jfeated for the second and last 
itime. 
The 116 million dollar use tax 
package put together by the Re- 
publican Senate majority will be 
ready for a decisive vote when 
the Senate returns at 8 p.m., ex- 
cept for the BAT element. 
      State police classified the death taxes was how far the Senate was of Charles Hinchcliff, 16, Ypsilanti, willing to go to meet House-de- as a traffic fatality because he mands for a 20 million dollar re- was killed on a public highway. venue increase from this source. CBS-TV’s Stripe Playhouse Hinchcliff died in an Ann Arbor| House members, nominally trotted out on Friday a number/hospital Saturday of head injuries'scheduled to meet tonight, were f called ‘a Ballad to Die For,” al received when gusts of wind blew ,expected to spend the night at film for a projected western him off the back of a truck. 
series filmed by Jack Webb’s Mark 
Darwin Holdeman, 25, was killed 
when he either jumped or fell into 
Cashion Lake near Baldwin. Po- 
lice recovered his fully clothed 
One-year-old Christine L. Ha- 
kala, Milwaukee, drowned Satur- 
day when she fell into the Choco- 
lay River in Marquette County. 
The body of Sylvia Jameson, 
13, Ionia, was recovered in 12         The big question on business 
jhome and show up at their desks 
‘at 10 a.m. Tuesday to review 
| whatever action the Senate takes. 
  
| WASHINGTON — Only about 25 
| per- cent of the U. S. is adequately 
mapped, according to the Geologi- 
cal Survey, 
    
  
{ 
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TV RENTAL fe 
BY DAY OR WEEK __         
    
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(And LALLA LL The People of Oakland County 
Who Never Finished 
HIGH SCHOOL are invited to write for FREE booklet. Tells how you can 
earn your American School Diploma 
-_ AT HOME IN SPARE TIME   
  
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  “Tis —STARTS— — 
THURSDAY 
“I may be your wife= 
t Rocked THE VALLEY OF THI 
    Eartuy is Mine!” CinemaScopt —anerw eee ween as a= as = 
PONTIAC LL DRIVE-IN THEATER 
> Deere Mwy ne 
tid 
AE  ee 
    ' i < \ . i ~ 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1959   
Ist Woman Dem Elected 
to Congress Dead at 84 
GREENWICH, Conn. ‘AP)—The 
first woman Democrat ‘in Con- 
gress, Mary T. Norton, is dead 
at 84. 
She died Sunday of a heart at- 
tick in Greenwich Hospital. 
Mrs. Norton rose through New 
Jersey politics and was named to THIRTY-FOUR | 
Union to Teach 
‘Latin Workers | CWA Plans Courses 
in Democracy to Offset 
“Red Growth in S.A. > Magazine 
Criticizes 
China‘s Mao 
HONG “KONG (AP)—An -imper- 
tant magazine in Communist 
China has published an article 
conceding that people like Mao 
Tze-tung can make mistakes. The 
? 
  
  fun toc Congrear in 1580 by Prank WASHINGTON (UPI) — Presi- ior Congress / : Hague, who headed the Jersey dent Joseph A. Beirne of the Com- 
City. N.J.. Democratic organiza- munications Workers of America 
tion. (AFL-CIO) has announced today a 
She was elected, and stayed in school to teach Latin American 
Congress for 26 years. On her workers ‘‘vigorous industrial De-| 
75th birthday, in 1950, she an- mocracy” will be opened at Front/ 
nounced that she would not seek Royal, Va., Aug. 14. re-election. She made the an- A CWA press release said it 
nouncement from the Bethesda, would be ‘‘a new experiment in 
Md., Naval Hospital, where she 
was recuperating from a combi- international relations combined 
with a unique education program 
nation of influenza and pnev- jto aid in offsetting the growing 
monia. menace of Communist penetration 
* * * in Latin America.” 
Her career in government was 
not over, however. Secretary of 
Laboy Maurice Tobin appointed 
her a special consultant to the 
Labor Department on ‘‘woman- 
power,” and she served until the from Central and South America | 
end — eS | | to the trade union institute at | 
she drew considerable attention QUe@EN Returns Home "et 8! | by calling for the repeal of pro- | The visitors will spend 90 days, 
hibition, at a time when most *, (studying and learning the funda-' 
congressmen were avoiding the After Str enuous Trip jmentals of effective industrial De-| 
gubject. She introduced the first imocracy, the press statement said. 
gesolution calling for repeal. LONDON (AP) — Queen Eliza-|!t added that the sponsors believe, 
Her congressional career set a ithe leaders will return to their 
gecord for length of service by a beth returned home Sunday from own countries equipped to train! 
‘woman legislator. For five years her 16,000-mile trip across North other leaders. | 
she headed the House Committee America, describing it as ‘‘stren-; ~ e& * 
on the District of Columbia, the uous but intensely interesting.’’ | Secretary of Labor James P.| 
first woman to ever head a,con-| The Queen and Prince Philip Mitchell and William F. Schnitz- | 
gressional committee. Be jwere met at London airport by ler, secretary-treasurer of the) 
x * ae |their children, Prince Charles and | AFL-CIO, will greet the visitors at 
- Princess Anne, Queen Mother an official opening ceremony. 
Pi Vator oman sea the | Flizabeth and Princess Margaret.’ .The classes will be under the; 
1937 became its chairman. She, a * ae : ; held that post for 10 years. Several thousand people cheered formerly of the University of Min- 
She was a strong New Dealer,|@8 the smiling Queen stepped out nesota. 
helping to guide and later. defend %f the blue and silver Comet jet.) The students will come trom Ar- 
the Roosevelt administration's 0% hand to greet her was Prime /gentina, Chile, Peru, Uruguay, 
wage -and hours legislation. She Minister Harold Macmillan and|Paraguay, Ecuador, Colombia, Five North American affiliates 
of Postal, Telegraph and Tele- 
phone International (PTT!) will 
cooperate in the program which | 
will bring 16 young union leaders |     MARY T. NORTON 
  
      
  also championed .the fair employ- Home Secretary Richard A. But- Costa Rica, Honduras, Guatemala|penditure in newspapers since 1950 
~ Hh has increased by over 220 million. ment practices act. er. jand Puerto Rico. [generally spoken of by his follow- 
‘Chinese Communist 
idirecti ‘of. James Carper,|When the problems came to light. 
direction) of Erp pate fe But he kept his more powerful 
post as chairman of the Chinese. 
Communist party. leader of Chinese communism is 
ers as infallible. 
The article, appearing in, the 
authoritative New China  semi- 
monthly mentions Mao _ through- 
out a lengthy discussion of prob- 
lems and mistakes of Commu- 
nist agricultural and _ industrial 
policies. 
* * * 
Mao is not mentioned by mame 
in the critical passage saying a 
great man cannot always be cor- 
rect. However, the writer used a 
Chinese word for great — ‘‘wei| 
ta’’ — that is always reserved for| 
Mao, > 
This provides strong support for 
speculation abroad that Mao faced) 
a storm of criticism aver his 
handling of China's ‘‘big lead for- 
ward” production campaign and 
his establishment of the barracks- 
type commune system last year. 
* * * 
Both programs ran into trouble 
and have undergone substantial 
revision. Excuses apparently are 
in order now. 
The context of the startling 
statement about Mao indicates 
however, that he has so far 
weathered the storm and still is! 
very much in command. | 
n * *® * 
Mao resigned as head of -the 
government         Oo — —— ———— Needs Elephantine Meal 
istri Fla. — An. average WASHINGTON—The District of A, Fila 
Columbia has an’ area of 69 square circus elephant ‘eats econ. 
miles. The federal census of 1960 of hay, one-half bushe! : Lots of People There 
  tion figure at 802.178. lons of water per day. 
hi 
  
  z & >       
        gen 
      
          == (fe) WHEN PAINTS APPLIED. 
RY IT woRKS LIKE MAGIC 
   TO BRIGHTEN ROOMS 
THAT ONCE WERE 
TRAGIC / ,     
        
    
  
  
© LOCAL TRADEMARKS, Inc. 
1 Gal. Boydell House Paint $ 3” 
Over 150 Custom Colors 
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  AP Wirephote 
- WHO’S GETTING NEEDLE — Eight-year-old Jackie Clevenger 
tries, to assure his-dog, Brownie, “‘It’ll hurt me more than it will 
you,”’ as the pooch receives his rabies shot in Richmond, Calif. 
Brownie wasn’t too convinced, but didn’t have much choice. 
        established its corporate popula-|seven pounds of bran, and 50 gal- 
  
  
  
|   
National advertisers’ annual ex.| 
  
In 1947 she was named ‘‘Out-   
  2 
standing Catholic Woman of the! 
Year.” | 
* * * i 
She was married to Robert F. 
Norton, a businessman, in 1909. | 
He died in 1934. Their only child: 
died soon after birth: 
Mrs. Norton came to Green- 
wich three years ago. 
She leaves two sisters, Mrs. Jo- 
seph McDonagan of Greenwich 
and Mrs. Ann Hopkins of New 
York City. 
Credit Card Plan 
Now Being Used 
on Eastern Buses 
ALLENTOWN, Pa. (AP)—Plain 
old money is losing out to the 
credit card on local buses. 
The Lehigh Valley Transit Co. 
announced Wednesday a ‘‘charge- 
a-fare” plan for bus rides in this 
northeastern Pennsylvania area. 
Passengers may use any one of 
three types of cards, depending 
on the service they want. Com- 
pany president A. M. Williams 
says the credit plan will create 
bookkeeping Proplems, but also 
boost business. » a 
  — ed 
= 
  
  
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DETROIT — About 10 per cent of 
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4